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7-letter words containing g, e, p

  • preeing — a test, trial, or taste; a test by sampling.
  • pregame — of, relating to, or happening in the period just before a sports game: The coach was interviewed in a pregame broadcast.
  • prepreg — material that is pre-impregnated with synthetic resin for further manufacture into reinforced plastic
  • presage — a presentiment or foreboding.
  • presong — of the period before a song is sung
  • preying — an animal hunted or seized for food, especially by a carnivorous animal.
  • prigger — a thief
  • primage — a small allowance formerly paid by a shipper to the master and crew of a vessel for the loading and care of the goods: now charged with the freight and retained by the shipowner.
  • prisage — the right of the king to take a certain quantity of every cargo of wine imported.
  • progeny — a descendant or offspring, as a child, plant, or animal.
  • progged — to search or prowl about, as for plunder or food; forage.
  • progger — a fan of progressive rock music
  • proglet — /prog'let/ [UK] A short extempore program written to meet an immediate, transient need. Often written in BASIC, rarely more than a dozen lines long and containing no subroutines. The largest amount of code that can be written off the top of one's head, that does not need any editing, and that runs correctly the first time (this amount varies significantly according to one's skill and the language one is using). Compare toy program, noddy, one-liner wars.
  • progres — (language)   PROgrammed Graph REwriting Systems.
  • pronged — having prongs (often used in combination): a four-pronged fork.
  • propage — to (cause to) reproduce
  • protege — a person under the patronage, protection, or care of someone interested in his or her career or welfare.
  • pugaree — pugree.
  • puggree — pugree.
  • pungent — sharply affecting the organs of taste or smell, as if by a penetrating power; biting; acrid.
  • pye-dog — an ownerless half-wild dog of uncertain breeding, common in the villages and towns of India and other countries in east and south Asia.
  • pyrogen — a substance, as a thermostable bacterial toxin, that produces a rise in temperature in a human or animal.
  • rampage — violent or excited behavior that is reckless, uncontrolled, or destructive.
  • reaping — to cut (wheat, rye, etc.) with a sickle or other implement or a machine, as in harvest.
  • regraph — a diagram representing a system of connections or interrelations among two or more things by a number of distinctive dots, lines, bars, etc.
  • regroup — to form into a new or restructured group or grouping.
  • seepage — the act or process of seeping; leakage.
  • seeping — to pass, flow, or ooze gradually through a porous substance: Water seeps through cracks in the wall.
  • septage — the waste or sewage in a septic tank.
  • sergipe — a state in NE Brazil. 8490 sq. mi. (21,990 sq. km). Capital: Aracajú.
  • serpigo — (formerly) a creeping or spreading skin disease, as ringworm.
  • spadger — a sparrow
  • spangle — a small, thin, often circular piece of glittering metal or other material, used especially for decorating garments.
  • sparger — a sprinkling.
  • specing — Usually, specs. specification (def 2).
  • spiegel — a lustrous, crystalline pig iron containing a large amount of manganese, sometimes 15 percent or more, used in making steel.
  • spignel — a European umbelliferous plant, Meum athamanticum, of mountain regions, having white flowers and finely divided aromatic leaves
  • splodge — blot, splotch
  • splurge — to indulge oneself in some luxury or pleasure, especially a costly one: They splurged on a trip to Europe.
  • sponger — a person or thing that sponges.
  • spragueFrank Julian, 1857–1934, U.S. electrical engineer and inventor.
  • spreagh — a raid to steal cattle
  • springe — a snare for catching small game.
  • super-g — a slalom race in which the course is longer and has more widely spaced gates than in a giant slalom.
  • temping — temporary (def 2).
  • templog — Extension of Prolog to handle a clausal subset of first-order temporal logic with discrete time. Proposed by M. Abadi and Z. Manna of Stanford University.
  • trepang — any of various holothurians or sea cucumbers, as Holothuria edulis, used as food in China.
  • unpaged — (of a publication) having unnumbered pages.
  • upgrade — an incline going up in the direction of movement.
  • upstage — on or toward the back of the stage.
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