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8-letter words containing g, a, i, n, e

  • sheading — any of the six subdivisions of the Isle of Man
  • shealing — a pasture or grazing ground.
  • shearing — Usually, shears. (sometimes used with a singular verb) scissors of large size (usually used with pair of). any of various other cutting implements or machines having two blades that resemble or suggest those of scissors.
  • siegbahn — Karl Manne Georg [kahrl mahn-nuh yey-awr-yuh] /kɑrl ˈmɑn nə ˈyeɪ ɔr yə/ (Show IPA), 1886–1978, Swedish physicist: Nobel prize 1924.
  • signable — suitable for signing, as in being satisfactory, appropriate, or complete: a signable legislative bill.
  • signaled — anything that serves to indicate, warn, direct, command, or the like, as a light, a gesture, an act, etc.: a traffic signal; a signal to leave.
  • singable — to utter words or sounds in succession with musical modulations of the voice; vocalize melodically.
  • sleaving — to divide or separate into filaments, as silk.
  • sneaking — acting in a furtive or underhand way.
  • speaking — the act, utterance, or discourse of a person who speaks.
  • spearing — a sprout or shoot of a plant, as a blade of grass or an acrospire of grain.
  • steading — the place of a person or thing as occupied by a successor or substitute: The nephew of the queen came in her stead.
  • stealing — Informal. an act of stealing; theft.
  • steaming — water in the form of an invisible gas or vapor.
  • svengali — a person who completely dominates another, usually with selfish or sinister motives.
  • sweating — the act or process of sweating
  • tabering — a small drum formerly used to accompany oneself on a pipe or fife.
  • tag line — the last line of a play, story, speech, etc., used to clarify or dramatize a point.
  • taligent — A company founded jointly by Apple and IBM in March 1992. HP announced in January, 1994 that it would buy a 15% stake in Taligent. They are working on an "object-oriented operating system", due to be finished sometime in 1995. However, various independent pieces of Taligent will likely appear to be used with other operating systems, e.g. IBM's WorkplaceOS. Pink is an older name for Taligent, dating back to work that Apple did before the formation of Taligent.
  • tangible — capable of being touched; discernible by the touch; material or substantial.
  • tapering — to become smaller or thinner toward one end.
  • teaching — Informal. teacher.
  • teraglin — an edible marine fish, Zeluco atelodus, of Australia which has fine scales and is blue in colour
  • triangle — a closed plane figure having three sides and three angles.
  • tweaking — to pinch and pull with a jerk and twist: to tweak someone's ear; to tweak someone's nose.
  • umangite — a copper selenide mineral, Cu3Se2, having a dark blue or red colour and metallic lustre
  • unageing — not ageing or seeming not to age
  • ungenial — unfriendly
  • vaginate — having a vagina or sheath; sheathed.
  • valeting — a male servant who attends to the personal needs of his male employer, as by taking care of clothing or the like; manservant.
  • veganism — a vegetarian who omits all animal products from the diet.
  • vicinage — the region near or about a place; vicinity.
  • vinegary — of the nature of or resembling vinegar; sour; acid: a vinegary taste.
  • vintager — a person who helps in the harvest of grapes for winemaking.
  • wafering — Present participle of wafer.
  • wagering — Present participle of wager.
  • wakening — awakening.
  • watering — a transparent, odorless, tasteless liquid, a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, H 2 O, freezing at 32°F or 0°C and boiling at 212°F or 100°C, that in a more or less impure state constitutes rain, oceans, lakes, rivers, etc.: it contains 11.188 percent hydrogen and 88.812 percent oxygen, by weight.
  • wavering — to sway to and fro; flutter: Foliage wavers in the breeze.
  • weakling — a person who is physically or morally weak.
  • weanling — a child or animal newly weaned.
  • wearying — Causing tiredness; tiring.
  • weavings — Plural form of weaving.
  • weighman — a person whose occupation is weighing goods, produce, etc.
  • windages — Plural form of windage.
  • wingbeat — One complete set of motions of a wing in flying.
  • wingmate — Alternative form of wingman.
  • wreaking — to inflict or execute (punishment, vengeance, etc.): They wreaked havoc on the enemy.
  • yeanling — the young of a sheep or goat; a lamb or kid.
  • yearling — an animal in its second year.
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