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7-letter words containing e, d, g

  • degrade — Something that degrades someone causes people to have less respect for them.
  • degreed — having an academic degree
  • degrees — any of a series of steps or stages, as in a process or course of action; a point in any scale.
  • deicing — Present participle of deice.
  • deigned — Do something that one considers to be beneath one's dignity.
  • delgadoCape, a cape at the NE extremity of Mozambique.
  • delight — Delight is a feeling of very great pleasure.
  • deluged — a great flood of water; inundation; flood.
  • deluges — Plural form of deluge.
  • delving — to carry on intensive and thorough research for data, information, or the like; investigate: to delve into the issue of prison reform.
  • demagog — a person, especially an orator or political leader, who gains power and popularity by arousing the emotions, passions, and prejudices of the people.
  • demerge — If a large company is demerged or demerges, it is broken down into several smaller companies.
  • demigod — In mythology, a demigod is a less important god, especially one who is half god and half human.
  • demoing — demonstration (defs 4, 6).
  • denning — Baron Alfred Thompson. 1899–1999, English judge; Master of the Rolls 1962-82
  • denting — a hollow or depression in a surface, as from a blow.
  • denying — to state that (something declared or believed to be true) is not true: to deny an accusation.
  • deraign — to contest (a claim, suit, etc)
  • derange — to disturb the order or arrangement of; throw into disorder; disarrange
  • derping — Present participle of derp.
  • derring — (obsolete) daring; warlike.
  • desighn — Misspelling of design.
  • designs — Plural form of design.
  • desking — the desks and related furnishings in a given space, such as an office
  • desugar — to rewrite (computer code) in a more refined and concise form; to remove all unnecessary syntactical elements from (computer code)
  • deterge — to wash or wipe away; cleanse
  • devling — a young devil
  • dhegiha — a division of the Siouan language family, comprising the dialects spoken by the Omaha, Osage, Kansa, Ponca, and Quapaw.
  • dieting — Present participle of diet.
  • digests — Plural form of digest.
  • diggers — a person or an animal that digs.
  • dighted — Simple past tense and past participle of dight.
  • digress — to deviate or wander away from the main topic or purpose in speaking or writing; depart from the principal line of argument, plot, study, etc.
  • dingers — Plural form of dinger.
  • dingier — Comparative form of dingy.
  • dingles — Plural form of dingle.
  • dingoes — Alternative spelling of dingosa; Plural form of dingo.
  • discage — to release (an animal or bird) from a cage
  • disedge — to render (an object) blunt
  • disegno — drawing or design: a term used during the 16th and 17th centuries to designate the formal discipline required for the representation of the ideal form of an object in the visual arts, especially as expressed in the linear structure of a work of art.
  • disgest — Obsolete form of digest.
  • diverge — to move, lie, or extend in different directions from a common point; branch off.
  • divulge — to disclose or reveal (something private, secret, or previously unknown).
  • do gree — to give satisfaction for an injury
  • dockage — a curtailment; deduction, as from wages.
  • dodgems — Plural form of dodgem.
  • dodgers — a person who dodges.
  • dodgery — the use of a dodge or dodges; trickery; duplicity.
  • dog ape — baboon.
  • dog leg — a route, way, or course that turns at a sharp angle.
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