0%

7-letter words containing g, o, p

  • poohing — poop4 .
  • pooling — Also called pocket billiards. any of various games played on a pool table with a cue ball and 15 other balls that are usually numbered, in which the object is to drive all the balls into the pockets with the cue ball.
  • pop-gun — a child's toy gun from which a pellet is shot by compressed air, producing a loud pop.
  • popping — to make a short, quick, explosive sound: The cork popped.
  • porangi — crazy; mad
  • porrigo — any disease of the scalp
  • portage — a city in SW Michigan.
  • porting — Military. the position of a rifle or other weapon when ported.
  • postage — the charge for the conveyance of a letter or other matter sent by mail, usually prepaid by means of a stamp or stamps.
  • postbag — mailbag.
  • posting — Chiefly British. a single dispatch or delivery of mail. the mail itself. the letters and packages being delivered to a single recipient. an established mail system or service, especially under government authority.
  • potager — a small kitchen garden
  • pottage — a thick soup made of vegetables, with or without meat.
  • pouring — to send (a liquid, fluid, or anything in loose particles) flowing or falling, as from one container to another, or into, over, or on something: to pour a glass of milk; to pour water on a plant.
  • pouting — having the lips sticking out, usually in order to show annoyance or to appear sexually attractive
  • presong — of the period before a song is sung
  • proagon — (in ancient Greek comedy) a disputatious exchange, sometimes of a slapstick nature, between the chorus and the characters, or among the characters themselves, usually following the parodos and preceding the agon.
  • probang — a long, slender, elastic rod with a sponge, ball, or the like, at the end, to be introduced into the esophagus or larynx, as for removing foreign bodies, or for introducing medication.
  • probing — to search into or examine thoroughly; question closely: to probe one's conscience.
  • prodigy — a person, especially a child or young person, having extraordinary talent or ability: a musical prodigy.
  • prodrug — an inactive substance that is converted to a drug within the body by the action of enzymes or other chemicals.
  • progeny — a descendant or offspring, as a child, plant, or animal.
  • progged — to search or prowl about, as for plunder or food; forage.
  • progger — a fan of progressive rock music
  • proglet — /prog'let/ [UK] A short extempore program written to meet an immediate, transient need. Often written in BASIC, rarely more than a dozen lines long and containing no subroutines. The largest amount of code that can be written off the top of one's head, that does not need any editing, and that runs correctly the first time (this amount varies significantly according to one's skill and the language one is using). Compare toy program, noddy, one-liner wars.
  • program — software
  • progres — (language)   PROgrammed Graph REwriting Systems.
  • prolong — to lengthen out in time; extend the duration of; cause to continue longer: to prolong one's stay abroad.
  • pronged — having prongs (often used in combination): a four-pronged fork.
  • propage — to (cause to) reproduce
  • protege — a person under the patronage, protection, or care of someone interested in his or her career or welfare.
  • prurigo — a skin condition characterized by itching papules.
  • pye-dog — an ownerless half-wild dog of uncertain breeding, common in the villages and towns of India and other countries in east and south Asia.
  • pygmoid — a pygmy
  • pyrogen — a substance, as a thermostable bacterial toxin, that produces a rise in temperature in a human or animal.
  • regroup — to form into a new or restructured group or grouping.
  • sapsago — a strong, hard, usually green cheese of Swiss origin, made with sour skim milk and sweet clover.
  • scoping — extent or range of view, outlook, application, operation, effectiveness, etc.: an investigation of wide scope.
  • serpigo — (formerly) a creeping or spreading skin disease, as ringworm.
  • sloping — to have or take an inclined or oblique direction or angle considered with reference to a vertical or horizontal plane; slant.
  • sopping — soaked; drenched: Her clothes were sopping from the rain.
  • splodge — blot, splotch
  • spoking — a simple past tense of speak.
  • sponger — a person or thing that sponges.
  • spongin — a scleroprotein occurring in the form of fibers that form the skeleton of certain sponges.
  • sporing — Biology. a walled, single- to many-celled, reproductive body of an organism, capable of giving rise to a new individual either directly or indirectly.
  • stop-go — Stop-go is used to describe processes in which there are periods of inactivity between periods of activity.
  • stopgap — something that fills the place of something else that is lacking; temporary substitute; makeshift: Candles are a stopgap when the electricity fails.
  • stoping — any excavation made in a mine, especially from a steeply inclined vein, to remove the ore that has been rendered accessible by the shafts and drifts.
  • t-group — sensitivity group.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?