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10-letter words containing a, r, g, i, l, t

  • litigators — Plural form of litigator.
  • liturgical — of or relating to formal public worship or liturgies.
  • logarithms — Plural form of logarithm.
  • lustrating — Present participle of lustrate.
  • magistrals — Plural form of magistral.
  • martingale — Also called standing martingale. part of the tack or harness of a horse, consisting of a strap that fastens to the girth, passes between the forelegs and through a loop in the neckstrap or hame, and fastens to the noseband: used to steady or hold down the horse's head.
  • matchgirls — Plural form of matchgirl.
  • migratable — Capable of migrating.
  • multigrade — a degree or step in a scale, as of rank, advancement, quality, value, or intensity: the best grade of paper.
  • multigrain — a small, hard seed, especially the seed of a food plant such as wheat, corn, rye, oats, rice, or millet.
  • multiorgan — Involving multiple organs of the body.
  • multirange — having several ranges
  • obligators — Plural form of obligator.
  • obligatory — required as a matter of obligation; mandatory: A reply is desirable but not obligatory.
  • party girl — a girl or woman who is interested in little else besides attending parties.
  • patrolling — (of a police officer, soldier, etc.) to pass along a road, beat, etc., or around or through a specified area in order to maintain order and security.
  • plagiarist — an act or instance of using or closely imitating the language and thoughts of another author without authorization and the representation of that author's work as one's own, as by not crediting the original author: It is said that he plagiarized Thoreau's plagiarism of a line written by Montaigne. Synonyms: appropriation, infringement, piracy, counterfeiting; theft, borrowing, cribbing, passing off.
  • plastering — a composition, as of lime or gypsum, sand, water, and sometimes hair or other fiber, applied in a pasty form to walls, ceilings, etc., and allowed to harden and dry.
  • playwright — a writer of plays; dramatist.
  • pregenital — of, relating to, or noting reproduction.
  • proctalgia — neural pain in the rectum or anus
  • profligate — utterly and shamelessly immoral or dissipated; thoroughly dissolute.
  • ragmatical — wild, rowdy, riotous
  • rattlingly — in a way that rattles
  • rear light — vehicle's tail or back light
  • regelation — a phenomenon in which the freezing point of water is lowered by the application of pressure; the melting and refreezing of ice, at constant temperature, caused by varying the pressure.
  • regimental — of or relating to a regiment.
  • regularity — usual; normal; customary: to put something in its regular place.
  • regulation — a law, rule, or other order prescribed by authority, especially to regulate conduct.
  • regulative — to control or direct by a rule, principle, method, etc.: to regulate household expenses.
  • relegation — to send or consign to an inferior position, place, or condition: He has been relegated to a post at the fringes of the diplomatic service.
  • relitigate — to make the subject of a lawsuit; contest at law.
  • replanting — to plant again.
  • right-laid — noting a rope, strand, etc., laid in a right-handed, or clockwise, direction as one looks away along it (opposed to left-laid).
  • saltigrade — moving by leaping.
  • salzgitter — a city in Lower Saxony, in central Germany, SE of Hanover.
  • slathering — to spread or apply thickly: to slather butter on toast.
  • springhalt — stringhalt.
  • springtail — any of numerous minute, wingless primitive insects of the order Collembola, most possessing a special abdominal appendage for jumping that allows for the nearly perpetual springing pattern characteristic of the group.
  • stalingrad — former name of Volgograd.
  • startingly — in sudden brief snatches, or with a sudden nervous jump or start
  • starveling — a person, animal, or plant that is starving.
  • sternalgia — pain occurring in or around the sternum
  • sternalgic — relating to or having sternalgia
  • straggling — to stray from the road, course, or line of march.
  • strangling — an incident in which someone is strangled
  • streamling — a small stream
  • strigilate — an instrument with a curved blade, used especially by the ancient Greeks and Romans for scraping the skin at the bath and in the gymnasium.
  • stringhalt — a nerve disorder in horses, causing exaggerated flexing movements of the hind legs in walking.
  • tagliarini — egg noodles cut in long, flat, slender pieces, narrower than tagliatelle.
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