6-letter words containing e, d, g
- dotage — a decline of mental faculties, especially as associated with old age; senility.
- dradge — (mineralogy) Inferior ore, separated from the better ore by cobbing.
- dragee — a sugarcoated nut or candy.
- dragge — Obsolete spelling of drag.
- dredge — Also called dredging machine. any of various powerful machines for dredging up or removing earth, as from the bottom of a river, by means of a scoop, a series of buckets, a suction pipe, or the like.
- dreggy — abounding in or like dregs; filthy; muddy.
- dreigh — dree.
- driegh — dree.
- droger — a long-masted boat used in the West Indies
- drogue — a bucket or canvas bag used as a sea anchor.
- drudge — a person who does menial, distasteful, dull, or hard work.
- dugite — A highly venomous snake found in SW Australia, similar to the related brown snakes.
- dunged — Simple past tense and past participle of dung.
- dunger — an old decrepit car
- dyeing — a coloring material or matter.
- eadwig — died 959 ad, king of England (955–57)
- eagled — Simple past tense and past participle of eagle.
- edberg — Stefan. born 1966, Swedish tennis player; winner of six Grand Slam singles titles: Wimbledon (1988, 1990), the US Open (1991–2), and the Australian Open (1985, 1987)
- edgier — nervously irritable; impatient and anxious.
- edgily — nervously irritable; impatient and anxious.
- edging — a line or border at which a surface terminates: Grass grew along the edges of the road. The paper had deckle edges.
- ending — An end or final part of something, especially a period of time, an activity, or a book or movie.
- engild — (transitive) To gild; to make splendid.
- engird — To ingirt.
- fagged — to tire or weary by labor; exhaust (often followed by out): The long climb fagged us out.
- fanged — to seize; grab.
- fidget — to move about restlessly, nervously, or impatiently.
- fledge — to bring up (a young bird) until it is able to fly.
- fledgy — feathered or feathery.
- floged — Misspelling of flogged.
- fodgel — fat; stout; plump.
- fogged — a cloudlike mass or layer of minute water droplets or ice crystals near the surface of the earth, appreciably reducing visibility. Compare ice fog, mist, smog.
- forged — to form by heating and hammering; beat into shape.
- fridge — a refrigerator.
- fudged — 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.
- fudges — Plural form of fudge.
- g-code — 1. Johnsson & Augustsson, Chalmers Inst Tech. Intermediate language used by the G-machine, an implementation of graph reduction based on supercombinators. "Efficient Compilation of Lazy Evaluation", T. Johnsson, SIGPLAN Notices 19(6):58-69 (June 1984). 2. A machine-like language for the representation and interpretation of attributed grammars. Used as an intermediate language by the Coco compiler generator. "A Compiler Generator for Microcomputers", P. Rechenberg et al, P-H 1989.
- gabbed — Simple past tense and past participle of gab.
- gabled — provided with a gable or gables: a gabled house.
- gadded — Simple past tense and past participle of gad.
- gadder — to move restlessly or aimlessly from one place to another: to gad about.
- gadget — a mechanical contrivance or device; any ingenious article.
- gadgie — a fellow
- gadite — a member of the tribe of Gad.
- gaffed — an iron hook with a handle for landing large fish.
- gagged — to introduce usually comic interpolations into (a script, an actor's part, or the like) (usually followed by up).
- gained — Simple past tense and past participle of gain.
- gaited — having a specified gait (usually used in combination): slow-gaited; heavy-gaited oxen.
- galled — to make sore by rubbing; chafe severely: The saddle galled the horse's back.
- gammed — Simple past tense and past participle of gam.