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9-letter words containing d, a, n, g, e

  • goosander — a common merganser, Mergus merganser, of Eurasia and North America.
  • gradients — Plural form of gradient.
  • grand feu — a firing of ceramics at a high temperature.
  • grand pre — a village in central Nova Scotia, on Minas Basin: locale of Longfellow's Evangeline.
  • grandeurs — the quality or state of being impressive or awesome: the grandeur of the Rocky Mountains.
  • grandezza — Magnificent or stately appearance; grandeur.
  • grandgentCharles Hall, 1862–1939, U.S. philologist and essayist.
  • grandiose — affectedly grand or important; pompous: grandiose words.
  • grandness — impressive in size, appearance, or general effect: grand mountain scenery.
  • grandsire — a grandfather.
  • grandview — a town in W Missouri.
  • gratineed — to bake or broil (food) in au gratin style.
  • gravesend — a seaport in NW Kent, in SE England, on the Thames River: incorporated into Gravesham 1974.
  • greendale — a town in SE Wisconsin.
  • greenhand — an inexperienced person, esp a sailor
  • greenhead — a male mallard.
  • greenland — a self-governing island belonging to Denmark, located NE of North America: the largest island in the world. About 844,000 sq. mi. (2,186,000 sq. km); about 700,000 sq. mi. (1,800,000 sq. km) icecapped. Capital: Godthåb.
  • greensand — a sandstone containing much glauconite, which gives it a greenish hue.
  • greenward — Towards an ecologically friendly situation.
  • grenadian — one of the Windward Islands, in the E West Indies.
  • grenadier — (in the British army) a member of the first regiment of household infantry (Grenadier Guards)
  • grenadine — a syrup made from pomegranate juice.
  • grindelia — any of various composite plants of the genus Grindelia, comprising the gumweeds.
  • groundage — a tax levied on ships that anchor in a port.
  • grunewald — Mathias [mah-tee-ahs] /mɑˈti ɑs/ (Show IPA), (Mathias Neithardt-Gothardt) c1470–1528, German painter and architect.
  • guanadrel — a substance, C 20 H 40 N 6 O 8 S, used as an antihypertensive.
  • guanidine — a colorless, crystalline, strongly alkaline, water-soluble solid, CH 5 N 3 , used chiefly in the manufacture of plastics, resins, rubber accelerators, and explosives.
  • guanodine — (biochemistry, genetics) any of the three nucleotides guanosine monophosphate, guanosine diphosphate and guanosine triphosphate.
  • guardsmen — Plural form of guardsman.
  • guidances — the act or function of guiding; leadership; direction.
  • gynaecoid — Characteristic of a woman.
  • hagridden — worried or tormented, as by a witch.
  • harangued — a scolding or a long or intense verbal attack; diatribe.
  • hardanger — embroidery openwork having elaborate symmetrical designs created by blocks of satin stitches within which threads of the embroidery fabric are removed.
  • hardening — a material that hardens another, as an alloy added to iron to make steel.
  • helengrad — a satirical name for Wellington as the seat of Helen Clark's socialist government from 1999 to 2008
  • helgoland — a German island in the North Sea. ¼ sq. mi. (0.6 sq. km).
  • heralding — (formerly) a royal or official messenger, especially one representing a monarch in an ambassadorial capacity during wartime.
  • hydrangea — any shrub belonging to the genus Hydrangea, of the saxifrage family, several species of which are cultivated for their large, showy flower clusters of white, pink, or blue.
  • indearing — Present participle of indear.
  • ingerland — a jocular spelling of England, as pronounced in the chants of sports, esp football, supporters
  • ingrafted — engraft.
  • ingrained — ingrained; firmly fixed.
  • intangled — Simple past tense and past participle of intangle.
  • integrand — the expression to be integrated.
  • la grande — a town in NE Oregon.
  • laddering — Present participle of ladder.
  • landgrave — (in medieval Germany) a count having jurisdiction over a large territory.
  • languaged — Having a specified type or number of languages.
  • languedoc — a former province in S France. Capital: Toulouse.
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