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7-letter words containing e, a, g, r

  • regtral — Mentioned in Attribute Grammars, LNCS 323, p.108. Relational Language. Clark & Gregory. First parallel logic language to use the concept of committed choice. Forerunner of PARLOG. "A Relational Language for Parallel Programming", K.L. Clark et al, Proc ACM Conf on Functional Prog Langs and Comp Arch, pp.171-178, ACM 1981.
  • regulae — (in a Doric entablature) a fillet, continuing a triglyph beneath the taenia, from which guttae are suspended.
  • regular — usual; normal; customary: to put something in its regular place.
  • reigate — a city in Surrey in SE England, a London suburb.
  • reimage — a physical likeness or representation of a person, animal, or thing, photographed, painted, sculptured, or otherwise made visible.
  • remuage — (in the making of sparkling wine, esp champagne) the process of turning or shaking the bottles to let the yeast lees move to the neck of the bottle for removal
  • restage — a single step or degree in a process; a particular phase, period, position, etc., in a process, development, or series.
  • ribcage — the enclosure formed by the ribs and their connecting bones.
  • riffage — (in jazz or rock music) the act or an instance of playing a short series of chords
  • rootage — the act of taking root.
  • rummage — to search thoroughly or actively through (a place, receptacle, etc.), especially by moving around, turning over, or looking through contents.
  • saggier — sagging or tending to sag: a saggy roof.
  • sargent — Sir (Harold) Malcolm (Watts) 1895–1967, English conductor.
  • seaborg — Glenn T(heodor) 1912–1999, U.S. chemist: chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission 1961–71; Nobel prize 1951.
  • seagirt — surrounded by the sea.
  • searing — to burn or char the surface of: She seared the steak to seal in the juices.
  • serfage — a person in a condition of servitude, required to render services to a lord, commonly attached to the lord's land and transferred with it from one owner to another.
  • seringa — any of several Brazilian trees of the genus Hevea, yielding rubber.
  • sevruga — a species of sturgeon, Acipenser stellatus, of the Caspian and Black seas.
  • shagger — a person who has sexual intercourse
  • skanger — a young working-class person who dresses in casual sports clothes
  • slanger — a street vendor
  • socager — a tenant holding land by socage; sokeman.
  • spadger — a sparrow
  • sparger — a sprinkling.
  • spragueFrank Julian, 1857–1934, U.S. electrical engineer and inventor.
  • spreagh — a raid to steal cattle
  • stagery — theatrical effects or techniques, or the arrangement of a production on stage
  • stagger — to walk, move, or stand unsteadily.
  • storage — the act of storing; state or fact of being stored: All my furniture is in storage.
  • strange — unusual, extraordinary, or curious; odd; queer: a strange remark to make.
  • sugared — covered, mixed, or sweetened with sugar.
  • sugarer — someone who sugars off, a producer of maple syrup
  • swagers — a tool for bending cold metal to a required shape.
  • swagger — to walk or strut with a defiant or insolent air.
  • taggers — a piece or strip of strong paper, plastic, metal, leather, etc., for attaching by one end to something as a mark or label: The price is on the tag.
  • tanager — any of numerous songbirds of the New World family Thraupidae, the males of which are usually brightly colored.
  • tangier — a seaport in N Morocco, on the W Strait of Gibraltar: capital of the former Tangier Zone.
  • tangler — to bring together into a mass of confusedly interlaced or intertwisted threads, strands, or other like parts; snarl.
  • teargas — any one of a number of gases or vapours that make the eyes smart and water, causing temporary blindness; usually dispersed from grenades and used in warfare and to control riots
  • tearing — violent or hasty: with tearing speed.
  • tegular — pertaining to or resembling a tile.
  • tragedy — a lamentable, dreadful, or fatal event or affair; calamity; disaster: stunned by the tragedy of so many deaths.
  • tragule — a very small, hornless deer found in Asia and West Africa
  • trangle — a small fesse or horizontal band or stripe across a shield
  • treague — an agreement to stop fighting
  • trepang — any of various holothurians or sea cucumbers, as Holothuria edulis, used as food in China.
  • trucage — art forgery
  • twanger — a person or object that twangs
  • umbrage — offense; annoyance; displeasure: to feel umbrage at a social snub; to give umbrage to someone; to take umbrage at someone's rudeness.
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