10-letter words containing g, a, y
- dynamiting — Present participle of dynamite.
- dysgraphia — inability to write, caused by cerebral lesion.
- dysgraphic — a person who suffers from dysgraphia
- eagle-eyed — having keen vision.
- easy going — calm and unworried; relaxed and rather casual: an easygoing person.
- easy-going — calm and unworried; relaxed and rather casual: an easygoing person.
- echography — a device that records oceanic depths by means of sonic waves.
- edaphology — The ecological relationship of soil with plants, and land cultivation practices.
- energy bar — high-calorie snack food
- energy gap — the difference of energy between the bottom of the conduction band and the top of the valence band of the electrons in a crystalline solid. For values below about 2eV the substance is considered to be a semiconductor whilst for higher values it is considered to be an insulator
- engagingly — In an engaging manner.
- engine bay — The engine bay is the space inside a vehicle for the engine.
- enlargedly — in an enlarged manner
- ergativity — the state of being ergative
- ergatogyne — a wingless, worker-like ant with female characteristics
- escapology — The study or art of escaping from a constriction, e.g. rope, handcuffs, etc.
- escatology — Alternative spelling of eschatology.
- exactingly — In an exacting manner.
- eyeballing — Present participle of eyeball.
- eyeglasses — (US) Spectacles, glasses.
- fairy ring — any of numerous mushrooms of meadows and open woods, especially the well-known Marasmius oreades, that spread in rings originating from mycelial growth: formerly supposed to mark the paths laid by dancing fairies.
- falsifying — Present participle of falsify.
- fee-paying — charging for service
- flaggingly — So as to flag or slow down; wearyingly.
- flagrantly — shockingly noticeable or evident; obvious; glaring: a flagrant error.
- flight pay — a pay supplement allowed by the U.S. Air Force to certain crew members who attain a minimum flight time per month.
- floatingly — In a floating manner.
- fly agaric — a very poisonous common woodland mushroom, Amanita muscaria, having a glossy red or orange cap with white spots, formerly a fly poison.
- forgivably — In a forgivable way.
- fragrantly — having a pleasant scent or aroma; sweet-smelling; sweet-scented: a fragrant rose.
- frying pan — A frying pan is a flat metal pan with a long handle, in which you fry food.
- frying-pan — a shallow, long-handled pan in which food is fried.
- fumigatory — having the ability to fumigate; relating to fumigation
- gadzookery — the use or overuse of period-specific or archaic expressions, as in a historical novel: Without any gadzookery and its excessive use of “forsooth,” “prithee,” etc., her first historical novel conveys a superb sense of the period.
- gainsaying — to deny, dispute, or contradict.
- gal friday — Older Use: Sometimes Offensive. a woman who acts as a general assistant in a business office or to an executive and has a wide variety of especially secretarial and clerical duties.
- galactosyl — the glycosyl radical of galactose
- galaxywide — Throughout a galaxy.
- galleryite — a spectator, as in a theater gallery or at a golf match.
- galleywest — Informal. into a state of unconsciousness, confusion, or disarray (usually used in the phrase to knock galley-west).
- gallically — pertaining to the Gauls or Gaul.
- galsworthy — John, 1867–1933, English novelist and dramatist: Nobel Prize 1932.
- gameplayer — One who plays a game or games.
- gamesomely — In a gamesome manner.
- gametocyte — a cell that produces gametes.
- gamilaraay — Kamilaroi.
- gamma rays — a photon of penetrating electromagnetic radiation (gamma radiation) emitted from an atomic nucleus.
- gammopathy — a disorder of the immune system characterized by abnormally increased levels of immunoglobulins in the blood.
- gargoylish — Of, pertaining to, or resembling a gargoyle.
- gargoylism — a congenital abnormality characterized chiefly by dwarfism, grotesque deformities of the head, trunk, and limbs, mental retardation, and enlargement of the liver and spleen.