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7-letter words containing g, o, e, l

  • eugenol — A colorless or pale yellow liquid compound present in oil of cloves and other essential oils and used in perfumery.
  • eulogia — blessed bread distributed to members of the congregation after the liturgy, esp to those who have not communed
  • flogged — to beat with a whip, stick, etc., especially as punishment; whip; scourge.
  • flogger — to beat with a whip, stick, etc., especially as punishment; whip; scourge.
  • flotage — an act of floating.
  • flowage — an act of flowing; flow.
  • fogless — Free of fog, either temporarily or permanently.
  • foglike — Resembling a fog or some aspect of it.
  • foilage — Obsolete or nonstandard spelling of foliage.
  • foliage — the leaves of a plant, collectively; leafage.
  • foreleg — one of the front legs of a quadruped, an insect, etc.
  • fregola — A type of pasta originating in Sardinia, resembling couscous and typically made with semolina flour.
  • froglet — A frog that skips the tadpole stage and emerges as a fully developed frog.
  • galileo — (Galileo Galilei) 1564–1642, Italian physicist and astronomer.
  • galleon — a large sailing vessel of the 15th to the 17th centuries used as a fighting or merchant ship, square-rigged on the foremast and mainmast and generally lateen-rigged on one or two after masts.
  • gallore — Misspelling of galore.
  • galoche — Alternative spelling of galoshe.
  • galoshe — (obsolete) A clog or patten.
  • geelong — a seaport in SE Australia, SW of Melbourne.
  • genlock — a method of synchronizing cameras by using an external signal
  • geoidal — an imaginary surface that coincides with mean sea level in the ocean and its extension through the continents.
  • geology — the science that deals with the dynamics and physical history of the earth, the rocks of which it is composed, and the physical, chemical, and biological changes that the earth has undergone or is undergoing.
  • ghoulie — a goblin
  • gleasonJackie (Herbert John Gleason"The Great One") 1916–87, U.S. comedian and actor.
  • glebous — clod-like; earthy
  • glencoe — a glen in W Scotland, in S Highland: site of a massacre of MacDonalds by Campbells and English troops (1692)
  • glenoid — shallow or slightly cupped, as the articular cavities of the scapula and the temporal bone.
  • gloated — to look at or think about with great or excessive, often smug or malicious, satisfaction: The opposing team gloated over our bad luck.
  • gloater — to look at or think about with great or excessive, often smug or malicious, satisfaction: The opposing team gloated over our bad luck.
  • globate — shaped like a globe.
  • globose — having the shape of a globe; globelike.
  • globule — a small spherical body.
  • glommed — Simple past tense and past participle of glom.
  • glomped — Simple past tense and past participle of glomp.
  • gloomed — Simple past tense and past participle of gloom.
  • gloried — Simple past tense and past participle of glory.
  • glories — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of glory.
  • glossae — Plural form of glossa.
  • glossed — Having a gloss.
  • glosser — a person or thing that puts a gloss or shine on something.
  • glosses — Plural form of gloss.
  • glouted — Simple past tense and past participle of glout.
  • glovers — Plural form of glover.
  • glowers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of glower.
  • glucose — a sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , having several optically different forms, the common dextrorotatory form (dextroglucose, or -glucose) occurring in many fruits, animal tissues and fluids, etc., and having a sweetness about one half that of ordinary sugar, and the rare levorotatory form (levoglucose, or -glucose) not naturally occurring.
  • gluepot — a double boiler in which glue is melted.
  • glutose — an ingredient of a syrupy mixture obtained by the action of alkali on levulose or found in the unfermentable reducing portion of cane molasses.
  • glycone — (carbohydrate) The sugar residue of a glycoside.
  • glycose — any of various monosaccharides
  • go live — be broadcast directly, go on air
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