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10-letter words containing g, a, n, s, e

  • signalment — a detailed description, especially of distinctive features, of a person for identification, usually for police purposes.
  • singhalese — Sinhalese
  • single man — an individual checker restricted to forward moves, as contrasted with a king.
  • single tax — a tax, as on land, that constitutes the sole source of public revenue.
  • slackening — an act of becoming looser
  • slathering — to spread or apply thickly: to slather butter on toast.
  • smaragdine — of or relating to emeralds.
  • smattering — slight or superficial knowledge; smattering.
  • sneakingly — acting in a furtive or underhand way.
  • snmp agent — (networking)   A software process that responds to queries using the Simple Network Management Protocol to provide status and statistics about a network node.
  • snow gauge — an instrument for measuring the depth of snow.
  • sole agent — the only appointed agent or representative
  • soundstage — a soundproof room or building in which cinematic films are shot
  • spattering — to scatter or dash in small particles or drops: The dog spattered mud on everyone when he shook himself.
  • speakingly — in an eloquent manner
  • spectating — to participate as a spectator, as at a horse race.
  • spent gnat — an angler's name for the spinner of various mayflies, esp Ephemeris danica and E. vulgata, particularly when lying spent on the water surface after mating and egg-laying
  • sphenogram — a cuneiform character.
  • spindleage — total number or capacity of spindles in a mill, area, etc.
  • spinigrade — a type of spiny echinoderm
  • sponge bag — a small, usually waterproof, case for carrying toilet articles.
  • spongeable — able to be cleaned with a sponge
  • spongecake — sweet cake of eggs and flour
  • spongeware — earthenware decorated with color applied with a sponge.
  • springdale — a city in NW Arkansas.
  • springhare — a leaping and burrowing rodent, Pedetes capensis, native to southern Africa, having kangaroolike legs and long, pointed ears.
  • springhead — a spring or fountainhead from which a stream flows.
  • st. gallen — a canton in NE Switzerland. 777 sq. mi. (2010 sq. km).
  • stage name — entertainer's pseudonym
  • staggering — tending to stagger or overwhelm: a staggering amount of money required in the initial investment.
  • stallenger — a trader who was required to pay a fee in order to sell goods at a market stall, not being a member of the local merchants' guild or corporation
  • staple gun — a machine for fastening together sheets of paper or the like, with wire staples.
  • starmonger — an astrologer or fortune-teller
  • starveling — a person, animal, or plant that is starving.
  • staudinger — Hermann [her-mahn] /ˈhɛr mɑn/ (Show IPA), 1881–1965, German chemist: Nobel prize 1953.
  • stealingly — in a stealthy or elusive manner; by stealing
  • steganopod — a bird belonging to the Steganopodes, a group of swimming birds such as pelicans and cormorants
  • stenograph — any of various keyboard instruments, somewhat resembling a typewriter, used for writing in shorthand, as by means of phonetic or arbitrary symbols.
  • sternalgia — pain occurring in or around the sternum
  • sternalgic — relating to or having sternalgia
  • stewarding — a person who manages another's property or financial affairs; one who administers anything as the agent of another or others.
  • straighten — make straight
  • stranglers — to kill by squeezing the throat in order to compress the windpipe and prevent the intake of air, as with the hands or a tightly drawn cord.
  • streamling — a small stream
  • stringbean — any of various kinds of bean, as the green bean, the unripe pods of which are used as food, usually after stripping off the fibrous thread along the side.
  • subheading — a subordinate division of a title or heading.
  • submanager — a secondary or assistant manager
  • subtangent — the part of the x-axis cut off between the ordinate of a given point of a curve and the tangent at that point.
  • sugar cane — a tall grass, Saccharum officinarum, of tropical and warm regions, having a stout, jointed stalk, and constituting the chief source of sugar.
  • sugar pine — a tall pine, Pinus lambertiana, of California, Oregon, etc., having cones 20 inches (51 cm) long.
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