9-letter words containing g, l, e, n, r
- rewilding — to introduce (animals or plants) to their original habitat or to a habitat similar to their natural one: proposals to rewild elephants to the American plains.
- rheingold — See The Ring of the Nibelung.
- rhigolene — a petroleum distillate intermediate between cymogene and gasoline, formerly used to produce local anesthesia by freezing.
- ridgeline — a line formed along the highest points of a mountain ridge.
- ridgeling — any male animal, especially a colt, with undescended testicles.
- seal ring — a finger ring bearing an incised design for embossing a wax seal.
- searingly — in a searing manner
- shearling — Chiefly British. a yearling sheep that has been shorn once.
- signaller — anything that serves to indicate, warn, direct, command, or the like, as a light, a gesture, an act, etc.: a traffic signal; a signal to leave.
- silvering — Chemistry. a white, ductile metallic element, used for making mirrors, coins, ornaments, table utensils, photographic chemicals, conductors, etc. Symbol: Ag; atomic weight: 107.870; atomic number: 47; specific gravity: 10.5 at 20°C.
- slavering — to let saliva run from the mouth; slobber; drool.
- slivering — a small, slender, often sharp piece, as of wood or glass, split, broken, or cut off, usually lengthwise or with the grain; splinter.
- sloganeer — a person who creates and uses slogans frequently.
- soldering — any of various alloys fused and applied to the joint between metal objects to unite them without heating the objects to the melting point.
- sporeling — Botany, Mycology. the young individual developed from a spore.
- springlet — a small spring of water.
- steerling — a young or small steer
- strangely — unusual, extraordinary, or curious; odd; queer: a strange remark to make.
- strangled — A strangled voice or cry sounds unclear because the throat muscles of the person speaking or crying are tight.
- strangler — to kill by squeezing the throat in order to compress the windpipe and prevent the intake of air, as with the hands or a tightly drawn cord.
- strangles — distemper1 (def 1b).
- strongyle — any nematode of the family Strongylidae, parasitic as an adult in the intestine of mammals, especially horses.
- superlong — extremely long
- surcingle — a belt or girth that passes around the belly of a horse and over the blanket, pack, saddle, etc., and is buckled on the horse's back.
- syringeal — of, relating to, or connected with the syrinx.
- tillering — a plant shoot that springs from the root or bottom of the original stalk.
- traguline — like or characteristic of a tragule
- traveling — activity: journeying
- trembling — to shake involuntarily with quick, short movements, as from fear, excitement, weakness, or cold; quake; quiver.
- unclogger — to free of an obstruction or impediment: to unclog a drain; to unclog rush-hour traffic.
- underling — a subordinate, especially one of slight importance.
- uneagerly — in an uneager manner
- ungarbled — to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: to garble instructions.
- ungirdled — a lightweight undergarment, worn especially by women, often partly or entirely of elastic or boned, for supporting and giving a slimmer appearance to the abdomen, hips, and buttocks.
- ungravely — in a light-hearted manner
- veeringly — in a veering manner
- vergilian — pertaining to or characteristic of the poet Vergil.
- wallering — (slang, US, pejorative) present participle of waller.
- wearingly — gradually impairing or wasting: Reading small print can be wearing on the eyes.
- weltering — to roll, toss, or heave, as waves or the sea.
- wergeland — Henrik Arnold. 1808–45, Norwegian poet and nationalist, remembered for his lyric and narrative verse
- wildering — (botany) A plant growing in a state of nature, especially one that has run wild or escaped from cultivation.
- willinger — Comparative form of willing.
- wranglers — Plural form of wrangler.
- wrestling — an act of or a bout at wrestling.
- year-long — Year-long is used to describe something that lasts for a year.
- yearlings — Plural form of yearling.