10-letter words containing g, i, t
- gluttonize — to eat like a glutton.
- glycolytic — of, relating to, or causing glycolysis.
- gneissitic — relating to gneiss
- gnosticism — a group of ancient heresies, stressing escape from this world through the acquisition of esoteric knowledge.
- gnosticize — to adopt or maintain Gnostic views.
- gnotobiote — a gnotobiotic animal.
- go against — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
- go in with — share cost
- go private — to restore private ownership of a corporation by buying back publicly held stock
- go quietly — If someone does not go quietly, they do not leave a particular job or a place without complaining or resisting.
- go without — be deprived of, not have
- go-carting — Go-carting is the sport of racing or riding on go-carts.
- go-getting — an enterprising, aggressive person.
- go-karting — racing in small vehicle
- goatfishes — Plural form of goatfish.
- god's gift — If a person thinks they are God's gift to someone or something, they think they are perfect or extremely good.
- gold point — the point at which it is equally expensive to buy, sell, export, import, or exchange gold in adjustment of foreign claims or counterclaims.
- gold stick — the gilded rod carried on state occasions by certain members of the royal household.
- goldsmiths — Plural form of goldsmith.
- goliathise — to play Goliath, exaggerate extravagantly
- goliathize — to exaggerate extravagantly
- goloptious — voluptuous
- goniometer — an instrument for measuring solid angles, as of crystals.
- goniometry — an instrument for measuring solid angles, as of crystals.
- gonnegtion — (nonce) eye dialect of connection.
- good faith — accordance with standards of honesty, trust, sincerity, etc. (usually preceded by in): If you act in good faith, he'll have no reason to question your motives.
- good night — enjoyable evening, night
- good thing — (convention) (From the 1930 Sellar and Yeatman parody "1066 And All That") Often capitalised; always pronounced as if capitalised. 1. Self-evidently wonderful to anyone in a position to notice: "The Trailblazer's 19.2 Kbaud PEP mode with on-the-fly Lempel-Ziv compression is a Good Thing for sites relaying netnews". 2. Something that can't possibly have any ill side-effects and may save considerable grief later: "Removing the self-modifying code from that shared library would be a Good Thing". 3. When said of software tools or libraries, as in "Yacc is a Good Thing", specifically connotes that the thing has drastically reduced a programmer's work load. Opposite: Bad Thing, compare big win.
- good title — a title to real property that is free from encumbrances, litigation, and other defects and that can readily be sold or mortgaged to a reasonable buyer or mortgagee.
- good-night — a farewell or leave-taking: He said his good-nights before leaving the party.
- goodnights — Plural form of goodnight.
- gothically — In a gothic way.
- graciosity — graciousness
- gradations — any process or change taking place through a series of stages, by degrees, or in a gradual manner.
- gradienter — an instrument on a transit for measuring angles of inclination in terms of their tangents.
- gradualist — (biology, politics) One who believes in gradualism.
- graduality — The state or degree of being gradual.
- graduating — a person who has received a degree or diploma on completing a course of study, as in a university, college, or school.
- graduation — an act of graduating; the state of being graduated.
- graffitied — Simple past tense and past participle of graffiti.
- graffitist — plural of graffito.
- grammatist — (historical) A teacher of prose literature and letters in Ancient Greece.
- grand tier — the first tier of boxes after the parquet circle in a large theater or opera house.
- grapefruit — a large, roundish, yellow-skinned, edible citrus fruit having a juicy, acid pulp.
- graphitize — to convert into graphite.
- graphitoid — resembling graphite
- graptolite — any colonial animal of the extinct class Graptolithina, most common in the Ordovician and Silurian Periods, thought to be related to the pterobranchs.
- graticules — Plural form of graticule.
- gratifying — tending to gratify; giving or causing satisfaction; pleasing.
- gratillity — gratuity