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9-letter words containing d, e, g, r, s

  • greedsome — greedy
  • greensand — a sandstone containing much glauconite, which gives it a greenish hue.
  • grounders — Plural form of grounder.
  • groundsel — groundsill.
  • guardless — Defenceless.
  • guardsmen — Plural form of guardsman.
  • hedgerows — Plural form of hedgerow.
  • hydrogels — Plural form of hydrogel.
  • hydrogens — Plural form of hydrogen.
  • ideograms — Plural form of ideogram.
  • ingressed — Simple past tense and past participle of ingress.
  • ingrossed — Simple past tense and past participle of ingross.
  • misgender — to refer to or address (a person, especially one who is transgender) with a pronoun, noun, or adjective that inaccurately represents the person's gender or gender identity: At first my teacher misgendered me.
  • misguider — One who misguides.
  • misregard — (obsolete) Wrong understanding; misconstruction.
  • nosegrind — (skateboarding) A trick where the skater grinds with only the front truck of the board.
  • noseguard — middle guard.
  • orderings — Plural form of ordering.
  • organised — to form as or into a whole consisting of interdependent or coordinated parts, especially for united action: to organize a committee.
  • posigrade — of, relating to, or designating motion in the same direction as the current or normal motion
  • predesign — to design beforehand or in advance
  • predigest — to treat (food) by an artificial process analogous to digestion so that, when taken into the body, it is more easily digestible.
  • presiding — to occupy the place of authority or control, as in an assembly or meeting; act as president or chairperson.
  • re-siding — a piece or section of siding: to put backing material on the re-sides.
  • red angus — one of a subpopulation of Aberdeen Angus beef cattle having a reddish coat.
  • redigress — to digress again
  • resending — to send again.
  • resighted — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
  • rigidness — stiff or unyielding; not pliant or flexible; hard: a rigid strip of metal.
  • rigsdaler — a former silver coin of Denmark, equal to 16 skillings; rix-dollar.
  • ringsider — a spectator at or near ringside, as of a boxing match or a nightclub performance.
  • rodgersia — a type of flowering plant which grows in shady and moist conditions
  • safeguard — something that serves as a protection or defense or that ensures safety.
  • sedgemoor — a plain in SW England, in central Somerset: final defeat of Monmouth 1685.
  • selfridgeHarry Gordon, 1857?–1947, British retail merchant, born in the U.S.
  • semirigid — not fully rigid; partly rigid.
  • shreading — furring attached to the undersides of rafters.
  • shredding — a piece cut or torn off, especially in a narrow strip.
  • siegfried — (in the Nibelungenlied) the son of Sigmund and Sieglinde and the husband of Kriemhild. He kills the dragon Fafnir, acquires the treasure of the Nibelungs, wins Brünnhilde for Gunther, and is finally killed by Hagen at the behest of Brünnhilde, whom he had once promised to marry: corresponds to the Sigurd of the Volsunga Saga. Compare Brünnhilde.
  • skybridge — Also called skywalk. a bridgelike structure for pedestrians built to link one building with another over a public alley or street.
  • soldering — any of various alloys fused and applied to the joint between metal objects to unite them without heating the objects to the melting point.
  • staggered — to walk, move, or stand unsteadily.
  • strangled — A strangled voice or cry sounds unclear because the throat muscles of the person speaking or crying are tight.
  • struggled — to contend with an adversary or opposing force.
  • submerged — under the surface of water or any other enveloping medium; inundated.
  • supergood — extremely good
  • swaggered — to walk or strut with a defiant or insolent air.
  • tragedies — a lamentable, dreadful, or fatal event or affair; calamity; disaster: stunned by the tragedy of so many deaths.
  • underages — shortage; deficiency in amount.
  • undergoes — to be subjected to; experience; pass through: to undergo surgery.
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