0%

8-letter words containing g, e, o

  • go broke — a simple past tense of break.
  • go under — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • go voice — (communications)   When two or more parties stop communicating digitally and resuming the conversation via voice communication over the telephone. Prototypically this is used (e.g., "Wanna go voice?") between two modem users to denote the action of picking up the phone while shutting off the modem, in order to use the same line for voice communication as had was being used for data transmission. Compare: Voice-Net.
  • go-ahead — permission or a signal to proceed: They got the go-ahead on the construction work.
  • go-devil — a flexible, jointed apparatus forced through a pipeline to free it from obstructions.
  • go-juice — fuel for an engine, esp petrol
  • goadster — a goadsman
  • goalless — the result or achievement toward which effort is directed; aim; end.
  • goatherd — a person who tends goats.
  • goatlike — any of numerous agile, hollow-horned ruminants of the genus Capra, of the family Bovidae, closely related to the sheep, found native in rocky and mountainous regions of the Old World, and widely distributed in domesticated varieties.
  • goatweed — a plant of the genus Capraria
  • gobblers — Plural form of gobbler.
  • gobshite — a mean and contemptible person, especially a braggart.
  • god game — a computer roleplaying game in which the player controls the destiny of one or more avatars within a large virtual environment
  • god help — You use God help you to warn someone that something unpleasant will happen to them if they do a particular thing.
  • goddesse — Archaic spelling of goddess.
  • godendag — a medieval Flemish club having a spike at the end.
  • goderich — Viscount, title of Frederick John Robinson, 1st Earl of Ripon. 1782–1859, British statesman; prime minister (1827–28)
  • godheads — Plural form of godhead.
  • godsends — Plural form of godsend.
  • godspeed — good fortune; success (used as a wish to a person starting on a journey, a new venture, etc.).
  • goebbels — Joseph Paul [yoh-zef poul] /ˈyoʊ zɛf paʊl/ (Show IPA), 1897–1945, German propaganda director for the Nazis.
  • goelette — A schooner.
  • goethalsGeorge Washington, 1858–1928, U.S. major general and engineer: chief engineer of the Panama Canal 1907–14; governor of the Canal Zone 1914–16.
  • goethite — a very common mineral, iron hydroxide, HFeO 2 , occurring in crystals, but more commonly in yellow or brown earthy masses: an ore of iron.
  • goffered — Simple past tense and past participle of goffer.
  • goidelic — Also called Q-Celtic. the subbranch of Celtic in which the Proto-Indo-European kw -sound remained a velar. Irish and Scottish Gaelic belong to Goidelic.
  • goldbergArthur Joseph, 1908–90, U.S. jurist, statesman, and diplomat: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1962–65; ambassador to the U.N. 1965–68.
  • goldenly — In a golden manner.
  • goldless — lacking gold
  • goldmine — Alternative spelling of gold mine.
  • goldsize — an adhesive used to fix gold leaf to a surface
  • goldtone — gold-coloured
  • goloshes — a waterproof overshoe, especially a high one.
  • gonaivesGulf of, an inlet of the Caribbean Sea, between the two peninsulas of W Haiti.
  • gone out — blank and without comprehension, as if stupefied in surprise
  • goneness — a sinking sensation; exhaustion or faintness.
  • gongster — a person who strikes a gong
  • gonocyte — an oocyte or spermatocyte
  • gonopore — an opening through which eggs or sperm are released, especially in invertebrates.
  • gonosome — the individuals, collectively, in a colonial animal that are involved with reproduction
  • gonzalesRichard Alonzo ("Pancho") 1928–1995, U.S. tennis player.
  • gonzález — Julio (ˈxuljo). 1876–1942, Spanish sculptor: one of the first to create abstract geometric forms with soldered iron
  • good egg — a person who is pleasant, agreeable, or trustworthy.
  • good joe — a warm-hearted, good-natured person.
  • good-bye — a farewell.
  • goodbyes — Plural form of goodbye.
  • goodness — the state or quality of being good.
  • goodsire — a grandfather
  • goodwife — Chiefly Scot. the mistress of a household.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?