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10-letter words containing e, g, l, r

  • great wall — ancient wall in China
  • greek love — anal intercourse.
  • green belt — an area of woods, parks, or open land surrounding a community.
  • green flag — (in automobile racing) a green-colored flag that is used to signal the start of a race.
  • green leek — any of several Australian parrots with a green or mostly green plumage
  • green line — (in Lebanon) a demarcation line that divides predominantly Christian East Beirut and predominantly Moslem West Beirut.
  • green lung — an area of parkland within a town or city, considered in terms of the healthier environment it provides
  • green mold — blue mold (def 1).
  • greenbelts — Plural form of greenbelt.
  • greencloth — the green covering of a billiard or gaming table
  • greenfield — a city in SE Wisconsin, near Milwaukee.
  • greenlight — (transitive) To approve; to permit to proceed.
  • greenlings — Plural form of greenling.
  • greenville — a city in NW South Carolina.
  • greg olson — (person)   President and CEO of Sendmail Inc.. Olson is an industry veteran who worked on distributed systems at Summit Systems Inc. then at Britton Lee Inc., Sybase Inc. and Integrated Systems Inc..
  • grenadilla — granadilla.
  • gressorial — adapted for walking, as the feet of some birds.
  • grey alder — a variety of alder (Alnus incana) with grey bark, common in temperate areas of the northern hemisphere
  • grey whale — a large N Pacific whalebone whale, Eschrichtius glaucus, that is grey or black with white spots and patches: family Eschrichtidae
  • grey-scale — (graphics)   (US "gray-scale") 1. Composed of (discrete) shades of grey. If the pixels of a grey-scale image have N bits, they may take values from zero, representing black up to 2^N-1, representing white with intermediate values representing increasingly light shades of grey. If N=1 the image is not called grey-scale but could be called monochrome. 2. A range of acurately known shades of grey printed out for use in calibrating those shades on a display or printer.
  • greynvilleSir Richard, Grenville, Sir Richard.
  • gridlocked — Simple past tense and past participle of gridlock.
  • grievingly — In a grieving manner.
  • grievously — causing grief or great sorrow: grievous news.
  • grillework — Alternative spelling of grillwork.
  • grillsteak — a flat fried cake of minced beef or lamb that is usually grilled from frozen
  • grimlooked — having a grim appearance
  • grisailles — Plural form of grisaille.
  • grisliness — The characteristic or quality of being grisly.
  • grottolike — Having the appearance of a grotto.
  • groundedly — in a grounded manner, or with good justification or reason
  • groundless — without rational basis: groundless fears.
  • groundsels — Plural form of groundsel.
  • grovelling — to humble oneself or act in an abject manner, as in great fear or utter servility.
  • growliness — The state or quality of being growly.
  • gruelingly — exhausting; very tiring; arduously severe: the grueling Boston marathon.
  • gruesomely — In a gruesome manner.
  • guard cell — either of two specialized epidermal cells that flank the pore of a stoma and usually cause it to open and close.
  • guerrillas — Plural form of guerrilla.
  • guide rail — a track or rail designed to control the movement of an object, as a door or window.
  • gulper eel — any deep-sea eel-like fish of the genera Eurypharynx and Saccopharynx and order Lyomeri, having the ability to swallow large prey
  • gum myrtle — any of several trees of the genus Angophora, native to Australia, allied to and resembling the eucalyptus.
  • gun barrel — firearm: tube-shaped part
  • gunslinger — Informal. gunfighter.
  • gyneolatry — The adoration or worship of women.
  • half tiger — a five-rand coin
  • handlanger — an unskilled assistant to a tradesman
  • heidelberg — a city in NW Baden-Württemberg, in SW Germany: university, founded 1386.
  • heliograph — a device for signaling by means of a movable mirror that reflects beams of light, especially sunlight, to a distance.
  • heortology — the study of the history and significance of the feasts and seasons in the ecclesiastical calendar.
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