6-letter words containing e, g
- agrise — to fear or shudder at (something frightful)
- agrize — to fear or shudder at (something frightful)
- aguise — to dress (the body)
- aguize — to dress (the body)
- aiglet — a metal or plastic tag or sheath at the end of a lace used for tying, as of a shoelace.
- alagez — Aragats
- alegar — malt vinegar
- alegge — to alleviate or lighten (a grief or burden)
- algate — by any means; anyway
- algren — Nelson. 1909–81, US novelist. His novels, mostly set in Chicago, include Never Come Morning (1942) and The Man with the Golden Arm (1949)
- allege — If you allege that something bad is true, you say it but do not prove it.
- alnage — the inspection and measurement of woollen cloth in ells
- ambage — ambiguity
- amonge — Archaic spelling of among.
- anergy — lack of energy
- angela — a feminine name: dim. Angie; var. Angelica, Angelina, Angeline
- angell — Sir Norman, real name Ralph Norman Angell Lane. 1874–1967, English writer, pacifist, and economist, noted for his work on the economic futility of war, The Great Illusion (1910): Nobel peace prize 1933
- angelo — a male given name.
- angels — a male or female given name.
- angers — a city in W France, on the River Maine. Pop: 156 965 (2006)
- angled — set at an angle
- angler — An angler is someone who fishes with a fishing rod as a hobby.
- angles — Plural form of angle.
- angrez — Alternative capitalization of Angrez.
- anlage — the basis of a later development; foundation
- apeing — Present participle of ape.
- apogee — The apogee of something such as a culture or a business is its highest or its greatest point.
- argent — (as adjective; often postpositive, esp in heraldry)
- argies — a term used to refer to an Argentine.
- argive — (in Homer, Virgil, etc) of or relating to the Greeks besieging Troy, esp those from Argos
- argued — Simple past tense and past participle of argue.
- arguer — to present reasons for or against a thing: He argued in favor of capital punishment.
- argues — to present reasons for or against a thing: He argued in favor of capital punishment.
- argute — (of sounds) shrill
- argyle — made of knitted or woven material with a diamond-shaped pattern of two or more colours
- ariege — a department of SW France, in Midi-Pyrénées region. Capital: Foix. Pop: 139 612 (2003 est). Area: 4903 sq km (1912 sq miles)
- atabeg — a Turkish leader who had a lower status than the ruler of the country and who acted as teacher and guardian to the male heir apparent
- augean — extremely dirty or corrupt
- augeas — king of the Epeans in Elis and one of the Argonauts.
- augend — a number to which another number, the addend, is added
- augers — Plural form of auger.
- augier — Guillaume Victor Émile [gee-yohm veek-tawr ey-meel] /giˈyoʊm vikˈtɔr eɪˈmil/ (Show IPA), 1820–89, French dramatist.
- augite — a black or greenish-black mineral of the pyroxene group, found in igneous rocks. Composition: calcium magnesium iron aluminium silicate. General formula: (Ca,Mg,Fe,Al)(Si,Al)2O6. Crystal structure: monoclinic
- avenge — If you avenge a wrong or harmful act, you hurt or punish the person who is responsible for it.
- aweigh — (of an anchor) no longer hooked into the bottom; hanging by its rode
- aweing — Present participle of awe.
- badged — a special or distinctive mark, token, or device worn as a sign of allegiance, membership, authority, achievement, etc.: a police badge; a merit badge.
- badger — A badger is a wild animal which has a white head with two wide black stripes on it. Badgers live underground and usually come up to feed at night.
- badges — Plural form of badge.
- bagels — Plural form of bagel.