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6-letter words containing e, g, a

  • bagmen — Plural form of bagman.
  • baguet — (architecture, zoology) Alternative form of baguette.
  • banged — Often, bangs. a fringe of hair combed or brushed forward over the forehead.
  • banger — Bangers are sausages.
  • bangle — A bangle is a decorated metal or wooden ring that you can wear round your wrist or ankle.
  • bangue — Alternative form of bhang.
  • barege — light silky gauze fabric made of wool
  • barged — a capacious, flat-bottomed vessel, usually intended to be pushed or towed, for transporting freight or passengers; lighter.
  • bargee — a person employed on or in charge of a barge
  • barger — (obsolete) The manager of a barge.
  • barges — Plural form of barge.
  • beagle — A beagle is a short-haired black and brown dog with long ears and short legs. It is kept as a pet or sometimes used for hunting.
  • beflag — to decorate with flags
  • begall — to make sore by rubbing
  • begaze — to gaze at
  • beggar — A beggar is someone who lives by asking people for money or food.
  • beglad — to make glad
  • begnaw — to gnaw at
  • belgae — an ancient Celtic people who in Roman times inhabited present-day Belgium and N France
  • beluga — a large white sturgeon, Acipenser (or Huso) huso, of the Black and Caspian Seas: a source of caviar and isinglass
  • bengal — a former province of NE India, in the great deltas of the Ganges and Brahmaputra Rivers: in 1947 divided into West Bengal (belonging to India) and East Bengal (Bangladesh)
  • blague — pretentious but empty talk; nonsense
  • bocage — the wooded countryside characteristic of northern France, with small irregular-shaped fields and many hedges and copses
  • bodega — a shop selling wine and sometimes groceries, esp in a Spanish-speaking country
  • borage — a European boraginaceous plant, Borago officinalis, with star-shaped blue flowers. The young leaves have a cucumber-like flavour and are sometimes used in salads or as seasoning
  • bregma — the point on the top of the skull where the coronal and sagittal sutures meet: in infants this corresponds to the anterior fontanelle
  • cadged — Simple past tense and past participle of cadge.
  • cadger — a person who cadges
  • cagers — Plural form of cager.
  • cagier — cagey.
  • cagney — James. 1899–1986, US film actor, esp in gangster roles; his films include The Public Enemy (1931), Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), The Roaring Twenties (1939), and Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) for which he won an Oscar
  • cangle — to wrangle
  • cangue — (formerly in China) a large wooden collar worn by petty criminals as a punishment
  • cargoe — Obsolete spelling of cargo.
  • cépage — the grape variety used to make a particular wine
  • change — If there is a change in something, it becomes different.
  • charge — If you charge someone an amount of money, you ask them to pay that amount for something that you have sold to them or done for them.
  • cigale — (language, tool)   A parser generator language with extensible syntax.
  • cowage — a tropical climbing leguminous plant, Stizolobium (or Mucuna) pruriens, whose bristly pods cause severe itching and stinging
  • creagh — a raid or foray
  • cubage — cubic content or volume
  • dagged — one of a series of decorative scallops or foliations along the edge of a garment, cloth, etc.
  • dagger — A dagger is a weapon like a knife with two sharp edges.
  • daggle — to soil by trailing through water or mud
  • dagoes — a contemptuous term used to refer to a person of Italian or sometimes Spanish origin or descent.
  • damage — To damage an object means to break it, spoil it physically, or stop it from working properly.
  • danged — damn (used euphemistically).
  • danger — Danger is the possibility that someone may be harmed or killed.
  • dangle — If something dangles from somewhere or if you dangle it somewhere, it hangs or swings loosely.
  • dargle — a wooded hollow
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