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

  • ruggedness — having a roughly broken, rocky, hilly, or jagged surface: rugged ground.
  • russetting — a boot or a piece of russet clothing
  • sage derby — a green-and-white Derby cheese flavoured with sage
  • sage green — grayish to yellowish green.
  • saltigrade — moving by leaping.
  • salzgitter — a city in Lower Saxony, in central Germany, SE of Hanover.
  • san german — a city in SW Puerto Rico.
  • sand tiger — any of several sharks of the family Odontaspididae, especially Odontaspis taurus, inhabiting shallow waters on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, having sharp, jagged teeth and sometimes dangerous to humans.
  • sandbagger — a bag filled with sand, used in fortification, as ballast, etc.
  • sanderling — a common, small sandpiper, Calidris alba, inhabiting sandy beaches.
  • sandgroper — a nickname for a Western Australian
  • sandgrouse — any of several birds of the family Pteroclididae inhabiting sandy areas of the Old World, resembling both pigeons and shorebirds and having precocial young.
  • saprogenic — producing putrefaction or decay, as certain bacteria.
  • sauntering — to walk with a leisurely gait; stroll: sauntering through the woods.
  • scampering — to run or go hastily or quickly.
  • scanderbeg — (George Castriota) 1403?–68, Albanian chief and revolutionary leader.
  • scapegrace — a complete rogue or rascal; a habitually unscrupulous person; scamp.
  • scattergun — A scattergun is a gun that fires a lot of small metal balls at the same time.
  • scattering — distributed or occurring here and there at irregular intervals; scattered.
  • scavengers — an animal or other organism that feeds on dead organic matter.
  • schoenberg — Arnold (ˈarnɔlt). 1874–1951, Austrian composer and musical theorist, in the US after 1933. The harmonic idiom of such early works as the string sextet Verklärte Nacht (1899) gave way to his development of atonality, as in the song cycle Pierrot Lunaire (1912), and later of the twelve-tone technique. He wrote many choral, orchestral, and chamber works and the unfinished opera Moses and Aaron
  • schongauer — Martin [mahr-tn;; German mahr-teen] /ˈmɑr tn;; German ˈmɑr tin/ (Show IPA), c1430–91, German engraver and painter.
  • scrapegood — a stingy person; a miser
  • screeching — causing or uttering screeches: screeching bats.
  • screedings — screeds or floor coverings
  • screenager — a teenager who is fully conversant with and skilled in the use of computers and other electronic devices
  • screenings — the act or work of a person who screens, as in ascertaining the character and competence of applicants, employees, etc.
  • scrivening — writing
  • scroungers — to borrow (a small amount or item) with no intention of repaying or returning it: to scrounge a cigarette.
  • sea ranger — a senior Guide training in seamanship
  • seaborgium — a superheavy, synthetic, radioactive element with a very short half-life. Symbol: Sg; atomic number: 106.
  • search dog — a dog trained to assist rescue workers in finding people buried under rubble by detection by smell
  • sedge wren — a small wren, Cistothorus platensis, of the Americas, inhabiting wet, sedgy meadows.
  • seger cone — a pyrometric cone composed of clay and salt.
  • segmentary — one of the parts into which something naturally separates or is divided; a division, portion, or section: a segment of an orange.
  • segregable — to separate or set apart from others or from the main body or group; isolate: to segregate exceptional children; to segregate hardened criminals.
  • segregated — characterized by or practicing racial segregation: a segregated school system.
  • segregator — an instrument for collecting the urine excreted by one kidney only.
  • seignorial — of or relating to a seignior.
  • seismogram — a record made by a seismograph.
  • self-guard — to keep safe from harm or danger; protect; watch over: to guard the ruler.
  • self-wrong — wrong done to oneself.
  • semidrying — not drying completely
  • serenading — a complimentary performance of vocal or instrumental music in the open air at night, as by a lover under the window of his lady.
  • serge suit — a suit made of serge, a twill-weave woollen or worsted fabric
  • sergius ii — died a.d. 847, pope 844–847.
  • sergius iv — died 1012, pope 1009–12.
  • serigraphy — a print made by the silkscreen process.
  • serologist — the science dealing with the immunological properties and actions of serum.
  • setigerous — having setae or bristles.
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