8-letter words containing d, i, n, g, l
- indulger — to yield to an inclination or desire; allow oneself to follow one's will (often followed by in): Dessert came, but I didn't indulge. They indulged in unbelievable shopping sprees.
- indulges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of indulge.
- ingulfed — Simple past tense and past participle of ingulf.
- inlarged — Simple past tense and past participle of inlarge.
- kindling — a litter of kittens, rabbits, etc.
- kludging — Simple past tense and past participle of kludge.
- landings — Plural form of landing.
- leadings — Plural form of leading.
- legioned — arranged in legions
- lendings — Plural form of lending.
- liaodong — a peninsula in NE China, extending S into the Yellow Sea.
- lingered — to remain or stay on in a place longer than is usual or expected, as if from reluctance to leave: We lingered awhile after the party.
- loadings — Plural form of loading.
- lodgeing — Obsolete form of lodging.
- lodgings — accommodation in a house, especially in rooms for rent: to furnish board and lodging.
- lordling — a minor, unimportant, or petty lord.
- maligned — to speak harmful untruths about; speak evil of; slander; defame: to malign an honorable man.
- maudling — Present participle of maudle.
- medaling — a flat piece of metal, often a disk but sometimes a cross, star, or other form, usually bearing an inscription or design, issued to commemorate a person, action, or event, or given as a reward for bravery, merit, or the like: a gold medal for the best swimmer.
- meddling — to involve oneself in a matter without right or invitation; interfere officiously and unwantedly: Stop meddling in my personal life!
- middling — equally distant from the extremes or outer limits; central: the middle point of a line; the middle singer in a trio.
- modeling — a standard or example for imitation or comparison.
- moldings — Plural form of molding.
- moulding — a growth of minute fungi forming on vegetable or animal matter, commonly as a downy or furry coating, and associated with decay or dampness.
- muddling — Present participle of muddle.
- needling — a small, slender, rodlike instrument, usually of polished steel, with a sharp point at one end and an eye or hole for thread at the other, for passing thread through cloth to make stitches in sewing.
- noodling — to improvise a musical passage in a casual manner, especially as a warm-up exercise.
- oldening — Present participle of olden.
- on-glide — a transitional sound produced by the vocal organs in moving from an inactive position or a previous sound to the articulatory position necessary for producing a following sound. Compare off-glide (def 1).
- pedaling — a foot-operated lever used to control certain mechanisms, as automobiles, or to play or modify the sounds of certain musical instruments, as pianos, organs, or harps.
- peddling — trifling; paltry; piddling.
- piddling — amounting to very little; trifling; negligible: a piddling sum of money.
- pindling — puny; sickly; frail; weak.
- pleading — the act of a person who pleads.
- pledging — a solemn promise or agreement to do or refrain from doing something: a pledge of aid; a pledge not to wage war.
- plodding — to walk heavily or move laboriously; trudge: to plod under the weight of a burden.
- puddling — a small pool of water, as of rainwater on the ground.
- raddling — Present participle of raddle.
- reedling — the bearded tit.
- reginald — a male given name: from an Old English word meaning “counsel and rule.”.
- riddling — a coarse sieve, as one for sifting sand in a foundry.
- ridgling — any male animal, especially a colt, with undescended testicles.
- saddling — a seat for a rider on the back of a horse or other animal.
- salading — the ingredients for a salad
- sandling — a sand eel
- scalding — to burn or affect painfully with or as if with hot liquid or steam.
- scolding — a person who is constantly scolding, often with loud and abusive speech.
- seedling — a plant or tree grown from a seed.
- shingled — a thin piece of wood, slate, metal, asbestos, or the like, usually oblong, laid in overlapping rows to cover the roofs and walls of buildings.
- sideling — sidelong or sideways; obliquely.