6-letter words containing e, a, g, r
- degras — an emulsion used for dressing hides
- dogear — A corner of a page in a book that has been folded down, usually to mark a place in the book.
- dradge — (mineralogy) Inferior ore, separated from the better ore by cobbing.
- dragee — a sugarcoated nut or candy.
- dragge — Obsolete spelling of drag.
- eagers — Plural form of eager.
- eagres — Plural form of eagre.
- earing — the part of a cereal plant, as corn, wheat, etc., that contains the flowers and hence the fruit, grains, or kernels.
- earwig — any of numerous elongate, nocturnal insects of the order Dermaptera, having a pair of large, movable pincers at the rear of the abdomen.
- egeria — ErrorTitleDiv {.
- eggars — Plural form of eggar.
- engram — A hypothetical permanent change in the brain accounting for the existence of memory; a memory trace.
- enrage — Make very angry.
- ergate — (entomology) A worker ant.
- erlang — (communication) A dimensionless statistical measure of the volume of telecommunications traffic relative to the capacity of a single channel.
- fanger — (Now chiefly dialectal) A receiver.
- farage — Nigel (Paul). born 1964, British politician; leader of UKIP (2006–09 and 2010–2016); member of the European Parliament from 1999
- forage — food for horses or cattle; fodder; provender.
- gabber — to talk or chat idly; chatter.
- gadder — to move restlessly or aimlessly from one place to another: to gad about.
- gaffer — the chief electrician on a motion-picture or television production.
- gagger — a person who writes or tells gags; gagman.
- gailer — Obsolete form of jailer.
- gainer — a person or thing that gains.
- gaiter — a covering of cloth or leather for the ankle and instep and sometimes also the lower leg, worn over the shoe or boot. Compare upper1 (def 7).
- galère — group of people having a common interest
- galore — in abundance; in plentiful amounts: food and drink galore.
- gamers — Plural form of gamer.
- gamier — having the tangy flavor or odor of game: I like the gamy taste of venison.
- gammer — an old woman.
- gander — a town in E Newfoundland, in Canada: airport on the great circle route between New York and northern Europe.
- ganger — a foreman of a gang of laborers.
- gaoler — jail.
- gapers — Plural form of gaper.
- gapier — Veterinary Pathology. a parasitic disease of poultry and other birds, characterized by frequent gaping due to infestation of the trachea and bronchi with gapeworms.
- gapper — (baseball) A ball hit through the regions between the outfielders.
- garage — a building or indoor area for parking or storing motor vehicles.
- garbed — a fashion or mode of dress, especially of a distinctive, uniform kind: in the garb of a monk.
- garble — to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: to garble instructions.
- garden — Alexander, 1730?–91, U.S. naturalist, born in Scotland.
- gareth — Arthurian Romance. nephew of King Arthur and a knight of the Round Table.
- garget — Veterinary Pathology. inflammation of the udder of a cow; bovine mastitis.
- gargle — to wash or rinse the throat or mouth with a liquid held in the throat and kept in motion by a stream of air from the lungs.
- garner — to gather or deposit in or as if in a granary or other storage place.
- garnet — Henry Highland, 1815–82, U.S. clergyman and abolitionist.
- garote — to execute by the garrote.
- garred — Scot. to compel or force (someone) to do something.
- garret — spall (def 1).
- garter — Also called, British, sock suspender, suspender. an article of clothing for holding up a stocking or sock, usually an elastic band around the leg or an elastic strap hanging from a girdle or other undergarment.
- garvey — a scowlike open boat, variously propelled, used by oyster and clam fishermen in Delaware Bay and off the coasts of Delaware and New Jersey.