7-letter words containing g, l, o, s
- longest — having considerable linear extent in space: a long distance; a long handle.
- longies — long underwear, especially for winter use.
- longish — somewhat long.
- loosing — free or released from fastening or attachment: a loose end.
- losings — causing or suffering loss.
- lossage — (jargon) /los'*j/ The result of a bug or malfunction. This is a mass or collective noun. "What a loss!" and "What lossage!" are nearly synonymous. The former is slightly more particular to the speaker's present circumstances; the latter implies a continuing lose of which the speaker is currently a victim. Thus (for example) a temporary hardware failure is a loss, but bugs in an important tool (like a compiler) are serious lossage.
- lounges — Plural form of lounge.
- lousing — Present participle of louse.
- lovings — Plural form of loving.
- lugones — Leopoldo [le-aw-pawl-daw] /ˌlɛ ɔˈpɔl dɔ/ (Show IPA), 1874–1938, Argentine poet and diplomat.
- lysogen — a bacterial cell or strain that has been infected with a temperate virus, one that does not cause destruction of the cell.
- mongols — a member of a pastoral people now living chiefly in Mongolia.
- mswlogo — (language) A Microsoft Windows front-end for Berkeley Logo by George Mills
. MswLogo has 3D primitives and GUI support. It runs on every flavour of Windows from 16-bit to NT. - nogales — a town in S Arizona.
- obliges — to require or constrain, as by law, command, conscience, or force of necessity.
- oblongs — Plural form of oblong.
- oligist — (mineralogy) Hematite or specular iron ore.
- olingos — Plural form of olingo.
- ologies — Plural form of ology.
- ologist — an expert or student in an academic branch of learning
- regloss — to gloss again or to give a new gloss to
- regosol — a type of azonal soil consisting of unconsolidated material derived from freshly deposited alluvium or sands
- s-algol — Orthogonal data structures on ALGOL 60. "S-Algol Language Reference Manual", R. Morrison, TR CS/79/1 U St Andrews, 1979. "An Introduction to Programming with S-Algol", A.J. Cole & R. Morrison, Cambridge U Press 1982.
- saligot — the water chestnut, Trapa natans
- saw log — a log large enough to saw into boards.
- schelog — (language, Scheme, Prolog) (Previously "slog"?) A Prolog to Chez Scheme macro translator by <[email protected]>. Schelog relies on continuations.
- schlong — the penis.
- semilog — (of graphing) having one scale logarithmic and the other arithmetic or of uniform gradation.
- shoggle — to shake or joggle
- shoggly — unsteady; shaky
- shoogle — to shake, sway, or rock back and forth
- siloing — a structure, typically cylindrical, in which fodder or forage is kept.
- slogged — to hit hard, as in boxing or cricket; slug.
- slogger — to hit hard, as in boxing or cricket; slug.
- sloping — to have or take an inclined or oblique direction or angle considered with reference to a vertical or horizontal plane; slant.
- sloughi — a smooth-haired hound originating in Morocco
- sloughy — the outer layer of the skin of a snake, which is cast off periodically.
- smalgol — SMall ALGOL. A subset of ALGOL 60.
- so long — this length
- soilage — an act or instance of soiling.
- soiling — to feed (confined cattle, horses, etc.) freshly cut green fodder for roughage.
- solfege — solfeggio.
- songful — abounding in song; melodious.
- splodge — blot, splotch
- subgoal — the result or achievement toward which effort is directed; aim; end.
- sunglow — a diffused, hazy light seen around the sun, caused by atmospheric dust.
- sylloge — a collection or summary
- volsung — a grandson of Odin and the father of Sigmund and Signy.
- weblogs — Plural form of weblog.