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7-letter words containing g, a, f

  • loafing — to idle away time: He figured the mall was as good a place as any for loafing.
  • magaluf — a resort town on the SW coast of Majorca
  • magfilm — a thin layer or coating: a film of grease on a plate.
  • magnify — to increase the apparent size of, as a lens does.
  • megafog — an amplified fog signal produced by the simultaneous sounding of multiple megaphones, each pointing in a different direction
  • naffing — used to emphasize that something is very poor or inferior
  • pageful — the amount (of text, etc) that a page will hold
  • pangfou — Bengbu.
  • pigface — a creeping succulent plant of the genus Carpobrotus, having bright-coloured flowers and red fruits and often grown for ornament: family Aizoaceae
  • rafting — a more or less rigid floating platform made of buoyant material or materials: an inflatable rubber raft.
  • rageful — angry fury; violent anger (sometimes used in combination): a speech full of rage; incidents of road rage.
  • ragfish — a deep-sea fish of the family Icosteidae, inhabiting the North Pacific, having a very flexible body owing to its soft, highly cartilaginous skeleton.
  • redflag — the symbol or banner of a left-wing revolutionary party.
  • refugia — an area where special environmental circumstances have enabled a species or a community of species to survive after extinction in surrounding areas.
  • regraft — to graft again
  • riffage — (in jazz or rock music) the act or an instance of playing a short series of chords
  • serfage — a person in a condition of servitude, required to render services to a lord, commonly attached to the lord's land and transferred with it from one owner to another.
  • waftage — the act of wafting.
  • wafting — to carry lightly and smoothly through the air or over water: The gentle breeze wafted the sound of music to our ears.
  • weftage — texture
  • weifang — a city in N Shandong province, in NE China.
  • yaffing — to bark; yelp.
  • yafiygi — (abuse)   /yaf'ee-y*-gee/ You asked for it, you got it. The command-oriented ed/vi/nroff/TeX style of word processing or other user interfaces which are not WYSIWYG. What you actually asked for is often not immediately apparent. This precise sense of "You asked for it, you got it" seems to have first appeared in Ed Post's classic parody "Real Programmers don't use Pascal"; the acronym is a more recent (as of 1993) invention.
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