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7-letter words containing e, r, g

  • corkage — a charge made at a restaurant for serving wine, etc, bought off the premises
  • cornage — a type of rent fixed according to the number of horned cattle pastured
  • corsage — A corsage is a very small bunch of flowers that is fastened to a woman's dress below the shoulder.
  • cortege — A cortege is a procession of people who are walking or riding in cars to a funeral.
  • cougher — A person who coughs.
  • courage — Courage is the quality shown by someone who decides to do something difficult or dangerous, even though they may be afraid.
  • cragged — full of crags.
  • cragger — a member of a carbon reduction action group
  • craigie — Sir William A(lexander). 1867–1957, Scottish lexicographer; joint editor of the Oxford English Dictionary (1901–33), and of A Dictionary of American English on Historical Principles (1938–44)
  • cranage — the use of a crane
  • creping — a lightweight fabric of silk, cotton, or other fiber, with a finely crinkled or ridged surface.
  • crewing — a group of persons involved in a particular kind of work or working together: the crew of a train; a wrecking crew.
  • cringed — to shrink, bend, or crouch, especially in fear or servility; cower.
  • cringer — A person who cringes or shies away.
  • cringes — to shrink, bend, or crouch, especially in fear or servility; cower.
  • cringey — causing acute feelings of embarrassment or disgust
  • cringle — an eye at the edge of a sail, usually formed from a thimble or grommet
  • cryogen — a substance used to produce low temperatures; a freezing mixture
  • daggers — Plural form of dagger.
  • damager — injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness: The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
  • dangers — Plural form of danger.
  • dangler — to hang loosely, especially with a jerking or swaying motion: The rope dangled in the breeze.
  • degrade — Something that degrades someone causes people to have less respect for them.
  • degreed — having an academic degree
  • degrees — any of a series of steps or stages, as in a process or course of action; a point in any scale.
  • demerge — If a large company is demerged or demerges, it is broken down into several smaller companies.
  • deraign — to contest (a claim, suit, etc)
  • derange — to disturb the order or arrangement of; throw into disorder; disarrange
  • derping — Present participle of derp.
  • derring — (obsolete) daring; warlike.
  • desugar — to rewrite (computer code) in a more refined and concise form; to remove all unnecessary syntactical elements from (computer code)
  • deterge — to wash or wipe away; cleanse
  • diggers — a person or an animal that digs.
  • digress — to deviate or wander away from the main topic or purpose in speaking or writing; depart from the principal line of argument, plot, study, etc.
  • dingers — Plural form of dinger.
  • dingier — Comparative form of dingy.
  • diverge — to move, lie, or extend in different directions from a common point; branch off.
  • do gree — to give satisfaction for an injury
  • dodgers — a person who dodges.
  • dodgery — the use of a dodge or dodges; trickery; duplicity.
  • dog-ear — (in a book) a corner of a page folded over like a dog's ear, as by careless use, or to mark a place.
  • doggers — Plural form of dogger.
  • doggery — doglike behavior or conduct, especially when surly.
  • doggrel — comic or burlesque, and usually loose or irregular in measure. rude; crude; poor.
  • dougher — A baker.
  • dowager — a woman who holds some title or property from her deceased husband, especially the widow of a king, duke, etc. (often used as an additional title to differentiate her from the wife of the present king, duke, etc.): a queen dowager; an empress dowager.
  • dragees — a sugarcoated nut or candy.
  • dragged — to draw with force, effort, or difficulty; pull heavily or slowly along; haul; trail: They dragged the carpet out of the house.
  • dragger — any of various small motor trawlers operating off the North Atlantic coast of the U.S.
  • draggle — to soil by dragging over damp ground or in mud.
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