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9-letter words containing g, o, i, n, t

  • cognation — relationship by descent from the same ancestor or source
  • cognetics — The engineering of objects to make them accommodate critical human thought process.
  • cognisant — a frequent misspelling of cognizant.
  • cognitech — (company)   A French software company specialising in artificial intelligence.
  • cognition — Cognition is the mental process involved in knowing, learning, and understanding things.
  • cognitive — Cognitive means relating to the mental process involved in knowing, learning, and understanding things.
  • cognizant — If someone is cognizant of something, they are aware of it or understand it.
  • cognovits — Law. an acknowledgment or confession by a defendant that the plaintiff's cause, or part of it, is just, wherefore the defendant, to save expense, permits judgment to be entered without trial.
  • collating — to gather or arrange in their proper sequence (the pages of a report, the sheets of a book, the pages of several sets of copies, etc.).
  • colleting — a collar or enclosing band.
  • combating — to fight or contend against; oppose vigorously: to combat crime.
  • commuting — the activity of travelling some distance to work every day by car, bus, or train
  • competing — Competing ideas, requirements, or interests cannot all be right or satisfied at the same time.
  • computing — Computing is the activity of using a computer and writing programs for it.
  • confuting — Present participle of confute.
  • congruity — the condition or fact of being congruous or congruent
  • connoting — Present participle of connote.
  • contagion — Contagion is the spreading of a particular disease by someone touching another person who is already affected by the disease.
  • contagium — the specific virus or other direct cause of any infectious disease
  • contusing — Present participle of contuse.
  • corrigent — (in a medicine) an ingredient that negates a side effect of another ingredient
  • corseting — Present participle of corset.
  • cosseting — to treat as a pet; pamper; coddle.
  • costings' — cost accounting.
  • costuming — a style of dress, including accessories and hairdos, especially that peculiar to a nation, region, group, or historical period.
  • cottaging — Cottaging is homosexual activity between men in public toilets.
  • cottering — Present participle of cotter.
  • cottoning — Present participle of cotton.
  • courtling — a fawning or sycophantic member of a royal court
  • covington — a city in N Kentucky, on the Ohio River.
  • decocting — Present participle of decoct.
  • deporting — Present participle of deport.
  • detorting — Present participle of detort.
  • detouring — Present participle of detour.
  • dictyogen — a monocotyledon with reticulated leaves
  • digestion — the process in the alimentary canal by which food is broken up physically, as by the action of the teeth, and chemically, as by the action of enzymes, and converted into a substance suitable for absorption and assimilation into the body.
  • digitonin — a type of glycoside obtained from the foxglove (Digitalis purpurea), used as a cleansing agent
  • digitoxin — a white, crystalline, water-insoluble cardiac glycoside, C 41 H 64 O 13 , or a mixture of cardiac glycosides of which this is the chief constituent, obtained from digitalis and used in the treatment of congestive heart failure.
  • dignotion — (obsolete) distinguishing mark; diagnostic.
  • diphthong — Phonetics. an unsegmentable, gliding speech sound varying continuously in phonetic quality but held to be a single sound or phoneme and identified by its apparent beginning and ending sound, as the oi- sound of toy or boil.
  • docketing — Also called trial docket. a list of cases in court for trial, or the names of the parties who have cases pending.
  • doctoring — Present participle of doctor.
  • dog latin — mongrel or spurious Latin.
  • dog train — a sleigh drawn by a team of dogs
  • downlight — a lamp, often a light bulb set in a metal cylinder, mounted on or recessed into the ceiling so that a beam of light is directed downward.
  • downright — thorough; absolute; out-and-out: a downright falsehood.
  • drag into — To drag something or someone into an event or situation means to involve them in it when it is not necessary or not desirable.
  • eddington — Sir Arthur (Stanley) 1882–1944, English astronomer, physicist, and writer.
  • eigentone — a characteristic acoustic resonance frequency of a system
  • ellington — Duke, nickname of Edward Kennedy Ellington. 1899–1974, US jazz composer, pianist, and conductor, famous for such works as "Mood Indigo" and "Creole Love Call"
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