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7-letter words containing g, e, p

  • li peng — born 1928, Chinese Communist politician: premier (1988–98)
  • magpies — Plural form of magpie.
  • medigap — (sometimes initial capital letter) private health insurance that supplements coverage for people already covered by government insurance.
  • meeping — Present participle of meep.
  • megapod — Megapode.
  • megilph — Alternative form of megilp.
  • mispage — page wrongly
  • mpeg-21 — (compression, standard, algorithm, file format)   A file format designed to merge very different things in one object, so you can store interactive material in this format (audio, video, questions, answers, overlays, non-linear order, calculation from user inputs, etc.)
  • nagapie — any nocturnal primate of the family Galagidae, native to continental Africa
  • opening — an open or clear space.
  • opgefok — damaged; bungled
  • package — a bundle of something, usually of small or medium size, that is packed and wrapped or boxed; parcel.
  • page in — (storage, architecture)   What a paging system does when it copies part of a task's working memory from swap space on disk to RAM.
  • pageant — an elaborate public spectacle illustrative of the history of a place, institution, or the like, often given in dramatic form or as a procession of colorful floats.
  • pageboy — a hair style in which the hair is rolled under, usually at shoulder-length.
  • pageful — the amount (of text, etc) that a page will hold
  • pagelet — (web)   A component of an HTML page, that contains directives, layout, and code in a single context. A pagelet may be a separate file or web page that contains information you want displayed across several pages. They are similar to server-side include files, as implemented in ASP+. Pagelets act like independent HTML frames and provide discrete access to content. They use Cascading Style Sheets as templates for defining their layout behavior in a single context.
  • pangaea — the hypothetical landmass that existed when all continents were joined, from about 300 to 200 million years ago.
  • pangene — a hypothetical particle of protoplasm
  • pannage — pasturage for pigs, esp in a forest
  • panurge — (in Rabelais' Pantagruel) a rascal, the companion of Pantagruel.
  • parerga — something that is an accessory to a main work or subject; embellishment.
  • passage — a slow, cadenced trot executed with great elevation of the feet and characterized by a moment of suspension before the feet strike the ground.
  • pawnage — the act of pawning.
  • paysage — a landscape or representation of a landscape
  • pealing — a loud, prolonged ringing of bells.
  • pecking — to strike or indent with the beak, as a bird does, or with some pointed instrument, especially with quick, repeated movements.
  • pedagog — a teacher; schoolteacher.
  • peeking — to look or glance quickly or furtively, especially through a small opening or from a concealed location; peep; peer.
  • peeling — the skin or rind of a fruit, vegetable, etc.
  • peeping — to utter the short, shrill little cry of a young bird, a mouse, etc.; cheep; squeak.
  • peerage — the body of peers of a country or state.
  • peering — to look narrowly or searchingly, as in the effort to discern clearly.
  • peg box — the head of a stringed instrument, with several pegs that can be turned so as to tune strings wound around them
  • peg leg — an artificial leg, especially a wooden one.
  • peg out — attach by pegs to a line
  • peg top — a child's spinning top, usually made of wood with a metal centre pin
  • peg-top — wide at the hips and narrowing to the ankle: peg-top trousers; peg-top skirts.
  • pegasus — 1.   (networking, product)   A product to support Internet searches, electronic mail, and Usenet news. 2.   (project)   An open source project run by The Open Group which implements a Common Information Model (CIM) Object Manager.
  • pegging — a pin of wood or other material driven or fitted into something, as to fasten parts together, to hang things on, to make fast a rope or string on, to stop a hole, or to mark some point.
  • pegless — without pegs; not requiring pegs
  • peglike — a pin of wood or other material driven or fitted into something, as to fasten parts together, to hang things on, to make fast a rope or string on, to stop a hole, or to mark some point.
  • pegwood — a rod of boxwood of about 1/3 inch (8.4 mm) diameter, cut in various ways at the end and used by watchmakers for cleaning jewels.
  • peiping — Wade-Giles. former name of Beijing.
  • pelagic — of or relating to the open seas or oceans.
  • pelasgi — the pre-Hellenic peoples who inhabited Greece and the islands and coasts of the Aegean Sea before the arrival of the Bronze Age Greeks
  • pelting — paltry; petty; mean.
  • pending — while awaiting; until: pending his return.
  • penguin — any of several flightless, aquatic birds of the family Spheniscidae, of the Southern Hemisphere, having webbed feet and wings reduced to flippers.
  • penning — a small enclosure for domestic animals.
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