7-letter words containing g, a, d
- dangled — Simple past tense and past participle of dangle.
- dangler — to hang loosely, especially with a jerking or swaying motion: The rope dangled in the breeze.
- dangles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dangle.
- danking — Present participle of dank.
- dapping — to fish by letting the bait fall lightly on the water.
- dapsang — Also called Godwin Austen [god-win aw-stin] /ˈgɒd wɪn ˈɔ stɪn/ (Show IPA), Dapsang [duh p-suhng] /dəpˈsʌŋ/ (Show IPA). a mountain in N Kashmir, in the Karakoram range: second highest peak in the world. 28,250 feet (8611 meters).
- dargahs — Plural form of dargah.
- darings — Plural form of daring.
- darling — You call someone darling if you love them or like them very much.
- darning — a mending with interlaced stitches
- darogha — a manager
- darting — a small, slender missile that is pointed at one end and usually feathered at the other and is propelled by hand, as in the game of darts, or by a blowgun when used as a weapon.
- dashing — A dashing person or thing is very stylish and attractive.
- daubing — to cover or coat with soft, adhesive matter, as plaster or mud: to daub a canvas with paint; to daub stone walls with mud.
- daugava — Latvian name of Dvina.
- dauting — to caress.
- dawning — gradually beginning to become light
- day-glo — Day-Glo colours are shades of orange, pink, green, and yellow which are so bright that they seem to glow.
- daygirl — a girl who attends a boarding school daily, but returns home each evening
- dayglow — the light given off by the atmosphere of the Earth as seen during daytime
- daylong — Daylong is used to describe an event or activity that lasts for the whole of one day.
- dcalgol — Data Communications ALGOL. A superset of Burroughs Extended ALGOL used for writing Message Control Systems.
- de vega — Lope [loh-pey,, -pee;; Spanish law-pe] /ˈloʊ peɪ,, -pi;; Spanish ˈlɔ pɛ/ (Show IPA), (Lope Félix de Vega Carpio) 1562–1635, Spanish dramatist and poet.
- deading — Present participle of dead.
- dealign — To put, or to become, out of alignment.
- dealing — selling or doing business in a particular commodity
- decagon — a polygon having ten sides
- degames — lemonwood.
- degauss — to neutralize the magnetic field of (a ship's hull) as a protection against magnetic mines, using equipment producing an opposing magnetic field
- deglaze — to dilute meat sediments in (a pan) in order to make a sauce or gravy
- degrade — Something that degrades someone causes people to have less respect for them.
- delgado — Cape, a cape at the NE extremity of Mozambique.
- demagog — a person, especially an orator or political leader, who gains power and popularity by arousing the emotions, passions, and prejudices of the people.
- deraign — to contest (a claim, suit, etc)
- derange — to disturb the order or arrangement of; throw into disorder; disarrange
- desugar — to rewrite (computer code) in a more refined and concise form; to remove all unnecessary syntactical elements from (computer code)
- dhegiha — a division of the Siouan language family, comprising the dialects spoken by the Omaha, Osage, Kansa, Ponca, and Quapaw.
- diagram — A diagram is a simple drawing which consists mainly of lines and is used, for example, to explain how a machine works.
- diagrid — a support structure used esp in the construction of large buildings, consisting of criss-crossing diagonal beams, whether of metal or other materials such as concrete
- dialing — Present participle of dial.
- dialogs — Plural form of dialog.
- dibatag — a small gazelle, Ammodorcas clarkei, of Somaliland, having a long neck: now rare.
- digamma — a letter of the early Greek alphabet that generally fell into disuse in Attic Greek before the classical period and that represented a sound similar to English w.
- digicam — A digital camera.
- digital — of, relating to, or using numerical calculations.
- digonal — of or relating to a symmetry operation in which the original figure is reconstructed after a 180° turn about an axis
- digrams — Plural form of digram.
- digraph — a pair of letters representing a single speech sound, as ea in meat or th in path.
- dingaan — died 1840, Zulu chief (1828–40), who fought the Boer colonists in Natal
- dingbat — Slang. an eccentric, silly, or empty-headed person.