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11-letter words containing e, r, g, o, t

  • drugged-out — being under the influence of drugs, especially a narcotic or an illicit drug.
  • earth lodge — a circular, usually dome-shaped dwelling of certain North American Indians, made of posts and beams covered variously with branches, grass, sod, or earth and having a central opening in the roof, a tamped earth floor, and frequently a vestibule.
  • earthmoving — of or relating to earthmovers: earthmoving machinery.
  • east orange — a city in NE New Jersey, near Newark.
  • eave trough — gutter (def 3).
  • eavestrough — gutter (def 3).
  • egocentrism — The constant following of one's egotistical desires to an extreme.
  • eigenvector — A vector that when operated on by a given operator gives a scalar multiple of itself.
  • elaborating — Present participle of elaborate.
  • electrogram — a record of an organ's electrical activity, measured by monitoring changes in electric potential
  • electrology — (dated) the branch of physical science that deals with electricity and its properties.
  • embrocating — Present participle of embrocate.
  • emigrations — Plural form of emigration.
  • engorgement — The process or the condition of becoming engorged, becoming over-filled with fluid.
  • engrossment — (uncountable) The state of being engrossed; concentration or preoccupation.
  • entogastric — (zoology) Relating to the interior of the stomach; applied to a mode of budding from the interior of the gastric cavity, in certain hydroids.
  • envigorates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of envigorate.
  • envigourate — Rare spelling of invigorate.
  • ergatocracy — Government by the workers.
  • ergatomorph — an ergatoid ant
  • estranghelo — an archaic, cursive form of the Syriac alphabet
  • ethnography — The scientific description of the customs of individual peoples and cultures.
  • evaporating — Present participle of evaporate.
  • exageration — Misspelling of exaggeration.
  • exaggerator — Someone who exaggerates.
  • excoriating — Present participle of excoriate.
  • exonerating — Present participle of exonerate.
  • expurgation — The act of expurgating, purging, or cleansing; purification from anything noxious, offensive, sinful, or erroneous.
  • expurgatory — Serving to expurgate.
  • feedthrough — a connector used to pass a conductor through a circuit board or enclosure.
  • fergusonite — a rare-earth mineral, yttrium columbate and tantalate, found in pegmatites.
  • ferromagnet — a ferromagnetic substance.
  • fertigation — (agriculture) the application of fertilizers or other water-soluble products through an irrigation system.
  • finger post — a post with one or more directional signs, terminating in a pointed finger or hand.
  • flagellator — Someone who flagellates, a whipper.
  • flote grass — an aquatic perennial grass, Glyceria fluitans, whose metre-long stems and pale green leaves are often seen floating in still or sluggish water. The related sweet grass (G. plicata) has broader, darker leaves and owes its name to the fact that cattle like to eat it
  • footbridges — Plural form of footbridge.
  • footdragger — One who deliberately delays obligatory action.
  • footslogger — Common term for a foot soldier. A person who footslogs.
  • forage mite — a mite normally occurring in forage but sometimes infesting the skin of mammals, esp horses, and birds
  • forecasting — Present participle of forecast.
  • foregathers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of foregather.
  • foresighted — Having or using foresight.
  • foretelling — Present participle of foretell.
  • forethought — thoughtful provision beforehand; provident care; prudence.
  • forgathered — Simple past tense and past participle of forgather.
  • forgetfully — In a forgetful manner.
  • forgettable — to cease or fail to remember; be unable to recall: to forget someone's name.
  • fort orange — a member of a European princely family ruling in the United Kingdom from 1688 to 1694 and in the Netherlands since 1815.
  • forty-eight — a cardinal number, 40 plus 8.
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