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7-letter words containing d, i, n, g

  • edgings — Plural form of edging.
  • editing — Present participle of edit.
  • educing — Present participle of educe.
  • eliding — Present participle of elide.
  • eluding — Present participle of elude.
  • endings — Plural form of ending.
  • enduing — Present participle of endue.
  • energid — (biology) A nucleus and the cytoplasm with which it interacts, considered as a unit.
  • engined — (in combination) Having a specified number or configuration of engines, or having a certain type of engine (e.g. diesel-engined).
  • enoding — Present participle of enode.
  • eroding — Present participle of erode.
  • evading — Present participle of evade.
  • exuding — Present participle of exude.
  • farding — facial cosmetics.
  • feeding — food, especially for farm animals, as cattle, horses or chickens.
  • feigned — pretended; sham; counterfeit: feigned enthusiasm.
  • fending — to ward off (often followed by off): to fend off blows.
  • feuding — Also called blood feud. a bitter, continuous hostility, especially between two families, clans, etc., often lasting for many years or generations.
  • finding — an act of finding or discovering.
  • folding — to confine (sheep or other domestic animals) in a fold.
  • fording — a place where a river or other body of water is shallow enough to be crossed by wading.
  • fringed — a decorative border of thread, cord, or the like, usually hanging loosely from a raveled edge or separate strip.
  • fröding — Gustaf (ˈɡʊstav). 1860–1911, Swedish poet. His popular lyric verse includes the collections Guitar and Concertina (1891), New Poems (1894), and Splashes and Rags (1896)
  • fudging — a small stereotype or a few lines of specially prepared type, bearing a newspaper bulletin, for replacing a detachable part of a page plate without the need to replate the entire page.
  • funding — a supply of money or pecuniary resources, as for some purpose: a fund for his education; a retirement fund.
  • fungoid — resembling a fungus; of the nature of a fungus.
  • gadding — to move restlessly or aimlessly from one place to another: to gad about.
  • gadling — Roving vagabond; one who roams.
  • ganoids — Plural form of ganoid.
  • gardian — Obsolete form of guardian.
  • gelding — a castrated male animal, especially a horse.
  • geminid — a member of a shower of meteors (the Geminids) occurring annually around December 13
  • gilding — the application of gilt.
  • girding — Present participle of gird.
  • gironde — an estuary in SW France, formed by the junction of the Garonne and Dordogne rivers. 45 miles (72 km) long.
  • glenoid — shallow or slightly cupped, as the articular cavities of the scapula and the temporal bone.
  • gliadin — a prolamin derived from the gluten of grain, as wheat or rye, used chiefly as a nutrient in high-protein diets.
  • gliddenCharles Jasper, 1857–1927, U.S. businessman: a pioneer in the telephone industry.
  • gliding — to move smoothly and continuously along, as if without effort or resistance, as a flying bird, a boat, or a skater.
  • glinted — a tiny, quick flash of light.
  • goading — a stick with a pointed or electrically charged end, for driving cattle, oxen, etc.; prod.
  • godding — the one Supreme Being, the creator and ruler of the universe.
  • godling — a minor god, especially one whose influence or authority is entirely local.
  • goldingLouis, 1895–1958, English novelist and essayist.
  • goldoni — Carlo [kahr-loh;; Italian kahr-law] /ˈkɑr loʊ;; Italian ˈkɑr lɔ/ (Show IPA), 1707–93, Italian dramatist.
  • gonidia — Plural form of gonidium.
  • gooding — Present participle of good.
  • goodwin — Expression meaning a good-hearted, or good-souled person, especially one who is young at heart.
  • gordian — pertaining to Gordius, ancient king of Phrygia, who tied a knot (the Gordian knot) that, according to prophecy, was to be undone only by the person who was to rule Asia, and that was cut, rather than untied, by Alexander the Great.
  • gradine — A low step or ledge, especially one at the back of an altar.
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