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8-letter words containing g, a, m

  • grammies — Plural form of grammy.
  • grampian — a region in E Scotland. 3361 sq. mi. (8704 sq. km).
  • grampies — Plural form of grampy.
  • grandame — a grandmother.
  • grandams — Plural form of grandam.
  • grandmas — Plural form of grandma.
  • grandmom — (US) Grandmother.
  • grantham — a town in E England, in Lincolnshire: birthplace of Sir Isaac Newton and Margaret Thatcher. Pop: 34 592 (2001)
  • grapheme — a minimal unit of a writing system.
  • graphium — a writing stylus
  • grasmere — a lake in Westmoreland, in NW England. 1 mile (1.6 km) long.
  • grassman — Hermann Günther [her-mahn gyn-tuh r] /ˈhɛr mɑn ˈgün tər/ (Show IPA), 1809–77, German mathematician and linguist.
  • gravamen — the part of an accusation that weighs most heavily against the accused; the substantial part of a charge or complaint.
  • graymail — a means of preventing prosecution, as for espionage, by threatening to disclose government secrets during trial.
  • gregatim — in flocks or crowds
  • grid map — a map on which a network of horizontal and vertical lines are superimposed, for locating points
  • grimaced — a facial expression, often ugly or contorted, that indicates disapproval, pain, etc.
  • grimaces — Make a grimace.
  • grimaldiJoseph, 1779–1837, English actor, mime, and clown.
  • grimdark — (fandom) Having a gloomy, dystopian atmosphere.
  • guaiacum — any of several tropical American trees or shrubs belonging to the genus Guaiacum of the caltrop family; lignum vitae.
  • guar gum — a plant, Cyamopsis tetragonolobus, of the legume family, grown as a forage crop and for its seeds, which produce a gum (guar gum) used as a thickening agent and stabilizer in foods and pharmaceuticals and as sizing for paper and cloth.
  • guisarme — a shafted weapon having as a head a curved, double-edged blade with a beak at the back.
  • gum band — a rubber band.
  • gumballs — Plural form of gumball.
  • gumlands — infertile land from which the original kauri bush has been removed or burnt producing only kauri gum
  • gunmaker — a person or company that makes guns.
  • gunmetal — any of various alloys or metallic substances with a dark gray or blackish color or finish, used for chains, belt buckles, etc.
  • gunwoman — A female gunman.
  • guttatim — (in prescriptions) drop by drop.
  • gymkhana — a field day held for equestrians, consisting of exhibitions of horsemanship and much pageantry.
  • gymnasia — a plural of gymnasium2 .
  • gymnasts — Plural form of gymnast.
  • gymnical — Alternative form of gymnic.
  • hame tug — a loop or short leather strap attaching a trace to a hame.
  • hemogram — a graphic record of the cellular elements of the blood.
  • hexagram — a six-pointed starlike figure formed of two equilateral triangles placed concentrically with each side of a triangle parallel to a side of the other and on opposite sides of the center.
  • hogmanay — the eve of New Year's Day.
  • hologamy — a type of reproduction in which the gametes are like ordinary cells in form and size, as is found in some algae and protozoa
  • hologram — a negative produced by exposing a high-resolution photographic plate, without camera or lens, near a subject illuminated by monochromatic, coherent radiation, as from a laser: when it is placed in a beam of coherent light a true three-dimensional image of the subject is formed.
  • homaging — Present participle of homage.
  • homepage — Alternative form of home page.
  • homogamy — the state of being homogamous.
  • hypogamy — Act or practice of seeking a spouse of lower socioeconomic status, or caste status than oneself.
  • ideogram — a written symbol that represents an idea or object directly rather than a particular word or speech sound, as a Chinese character.
  • idiogram — Karyogram.
  • imagable — Alternative form of imageable.
  • imaginal — of, relating to, or having the form of an imago.
  • imagines — to form a mental image of (something not actually present to the senses).
  • imagists — (often initial capital letter) a theory or practice of a group of poets in England and America between 1909 and 1917 who believed that poetry should employ the language of common speech, create new rhythms, have complete freedom in subject matter, and present a clear, concentrated, and precise image.
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