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11-letter words containing a, r, n, d

  • garden city — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit.
  • garden flat — a flat with direct access to a garden: typically, a garden flat consists of basement accommodation in prewar property, but some are in purpose-built blocks in urban areas
  • garden hose — tube for spraying plants with water
  • garden path — paved walkway
  • garden pink — the plant Dianthus plumarius
  • garden seat — a seat, usually kept permanently outdoors in a garden
  • garden wall — a wall surrounding a garden or separating two gardens
  • garden-path — noting or pertaining to a sentence that is easily parsed incorrectly because its beginning suggests it has an interpretation that it clearly does not have.
  • garlandless — without a garland or garlands
  • garnet jade — a green grossularite, used as a gem: not a true jade.
  • gastrodynia — (pathology) gastralgia (stomach pain).
  • gay gordons — an energetic old-time dance
  • gazundering — Present participle of gazunder.
  • gendarmerie — gendarmes collectively; a body of gendarmes.
  • gender bias — sexual discrimination
  • generalised — Alternative spelling of generalized.
  • generalized — to infer (a general principle, trend, etc.) from particular facts, statistics, or the like.
  • genocidaire — a person who is guilty of genocide
  • gerrymander — U.S. Politics. the dividing of a state, county, etc., into election districts so as to give one political party a majority in many districts while concentrating the voting strength of the other party into as few districts as possible.
  • ghirlandaio — (Domenico di Tommaso Curradi di Doffo Bigordi) 1449–94, Italian painter.
  • gingerbread — a type of cake flavored with ginger and molasses.
  • glad-hander — to greet warmly.
  • goaltenders — Plural form of goaltender.
  • god-fearing — deeply respectful or fearful of God.
  • godforsaken — desolate; remote; deserted: They live in some godforsaken place 40 miles from the nearest town.
  • goes around — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • gold orange — an orange-yellow, slightly water-soluble powder, C 1 4 H 1 4 N 3 NaO 3 S, used chiefly as an acid-base indicator.
  • goldbergian — Rube Goldberg.
  • golden ager — an elderly person, especially one who has retired.
  • golden gram — (in the East Indies) the chickpea used as a food for people and cattle.
  • golden-ager — an elderly person, especially one who has retired.
  • gonadotrope — a gonadotropic substance.
  • good nature — pleasant disposition; kindly nature; amiability.
  • goodnatured — Alternative spelling of good-natured.
  • goods train — freight train.
  • goof around — to blunder; make an error, misjudgment, etc.
  • gormandized — Simple past tense and past participle of gormandize.
  • gormandizer — A person who gormandizes; a glutton or gourmand.
  • gormandizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gormandize.
  • gourmandise — unrestrained enjoyment of fine foods, wines, and the like.
  • gourmandism — a person who is fond of good eating, often indiscriminatingly and to excess.
  • gourmandize — to enjoy fine food and drink, especially often and in lavish quantity.
  • grab handle — A grab handle is a handle on the side of an object such as a bathtub that you hold in order to help you get in and out.
  • gradational — any process or change taking place through a series of stages, by degrees, or in a gradual manner.
  • grade point — Education. a numerical equivalent to a received letter grade, usually 0 for F, 1 for D, 2 for C, 3 for B, and 4 for A, that is multiplied by the number of credits for the course: used to compute a grade point average.
  • gradualness — The condition of being gradual.
  • graduations — Plural form of graduation.
  • graham land — a part of the British Antarctic Territory, in the N section of the Antarctic Peninsula: formerly the British name for the entire peninsula.
  • granadillas — Plural form of granadilla.
  • grand banks — an extensive shoal SE of Newfoundland: fishing grounds. 350 miles (565 km) long; 40,000 sq. mi. (104,000 sq. km).
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