7-letter words containing g, a, u, n
- kurgans — Plural form of kurgan.
- kwangju — a city in SW South Korea.
- langour — Misspelling of languor.
- langued — (of an animal in a heraldic coat-of-arms, etc) having a tongue
- languet — any of various small tongue-shaped parts, processes, or projections.
- languid — lacking in vigor or vitality; slack or slow: a languid manner.
- languor — lack of energy or vitality; sluggishness.
- langurs — Plural form of langur.
- lauding — to praise; extol.
- leguaan — a large amphibious monitor lizard of the genus Varanus, esp V. niloticus (the water leguaan), which can grow up to 2 or 3 m
- linguae — the tongue or a part like a tongue.
- lingual — of or relating to the tongue or some tonguelike part.
- lingula — a tongue-shaped organ, process, or tissue.
- luangwa — a river in E Zambia, flowing SSW to the Zambezi River. 500 miles (805 km) long: forms part of boundary with Mozambique.
- luganda — a Bantu language of Uganda.
- lugansk — a city in E Ukraine, in the Donets Basin.
- lumbang — a euphorbiaceous tree, Aleurites mollucana, the fruits of which yield tung oil
- luoyang — a city in N Henan province, in E China.
- magnium — (obsolete) magnesium.
- magnums — Plural form of magnum.
- mahuang — a Chinese shrub, Ephedra sinica, that is a source of ephedrine.
- majunga — a seaport on NW Madagascar.
- managua — a republic in Central America. 57,143 sq. mi. (148,000 sq. km). Capital: Managua.
- mangrum — Lloyd, 1914–73, U.S. golf player.
- mauling — a heavy hammer, as for driving stakes or wedges.
- montagu — Ashley (Montague Francis Ashley Montagu) 1905–1999, U.S. anthropologist and writer, born in England.
- mustang — a small, hardy horse of the American plains, descended from Spanish stock.
- mutagen — a substance or preparation capable of inducing mutation.
- naughty — improper, tasteless, indecorous, or indecent: a naughty word.
- nougats — Plural form of nougat.
- nuraghe — any of the large, tower-shaped, prehistoric stone structures found in Sardinia and dating from the second millennium b.c. to the Roman conquest.
- nutgall — a nutlike gall or excrescence, especially one formed on an oak.
- nylghau — nilgai.
- nyungar — an Australian Aboriginal language spoken over a large area of southwest Western Australia, including Perth and Albany.
- organum — an organon.
- oubangi — French name of Ubangi.
- outgain — to gain more than
- outgnaw — to exceed in gnawing
- outrang — simple past tense of outring.
- outsang — simple past tense of outsing.
- pangfou — Bengbu.
- panurge — (in Rabelais' Pantagruel) a rascal, the companion of Pantagruel.
- pauling — Linus Carl [lahy-nuh s] /ˈlaɪ nəs/ (Show IPA), 1901–94, U.S. chemist: Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1954, Nobel Peace Prize 1962.
- quaking — (of persons) to shake or tremble from cold, weakness, fear, anger, or the like: He spoke boldly even though his legs were quaking.
- quangos — Plural form of quango.
- rangpur — a variety of mandarin orange, bearing a tart fruit.
- ray gun — a gun that can fire bursts of usually destructive or lethal rays: a science fiction novel whose hero has a ray gun made of gold.
- runanga — a Māori assembly or council
- sagunto — a city in E Spain, N of Valencia: besieged by Hannibal 219–218 b.c.
- sandbug — mole crab.