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6-letter words containing g, o, r

  • gravol — an antihistamine used in the prevention of nausea, esp in travel sickness; dimenhydrinate
  • greco- — Greek, Greek and
  • greebo — an unkempt or dirty-looking young man
  • griefo — marijuana.
  • griffo — griefo.
  • gringo — a term used in Latin America or Spain to refer to a foreigner, especially one of U.S. or British descent (sometimes used facetiously).
  • griots — Plural form of griot.
  • grison — a weasellike carnivore, Galictis vittata, ranging from southern Mexico to Peru, having a grayish-white upper body, a distinctive white stripe across the forehead and ears, and a dark brown face, chest, and legs.
  • groane — Obsolete spelling of groan.
  • groans — Plural form of groan.
  • groats — a silver coin of England, equal to four pennies, issued from 1279 to 1662.
  • grocer — the owner or operator of a store that sells general food supplies and certain nonedible articles of household use, as soaps and paper products.
  • grodno — a city in W Byelorussia (Belarus), on the Niemen River: formerly in Poland.
  • groete — Gerhard [Dutch khey-rahrt;; English gair-hahrt] /Dutch ˈxeɪ rɑrt;; English ˈgɛər hɑrt/ (Show IPA), (Gerardus Magnus) 1340–84, Dutch religious reformer, educator, and author: founder of the order of Brethren of the Common Life.
  • groggy — staggering, as from exhaustion or blows: a boxer groggy from his opponent's hard left jab.
  • groins — Plural form of groin.
  • gromet — Alternative form of grommet.
  • grooly — gruesome
  • grooms — Plural form of groom.
  • groote — Gerhard [Dutch khey-rahrt;; English gair-hahrt] /Dutch ˈxeɪ rɑrt;; English ˈgɛər hɑrt/ (Show IPA), (Gerardus Magnus) 1340–84, Dutch religious reformer, educator, and author: founder of the order of Brethren of the Common Life.
  • groove — a long, narrow cut or indentation in a surface, as the cut in a board to receive the tongue of another board (tongue-and-groove joint) a furrow, or a natural indentation on an organism.
  • groovy — Slang. highly stimulating or attractive; excellent: groovy music; a groovy car.
  • groped — to feel about with the hands; feel one's way: I had to grope around in the darkness before I found the light switch.
  • groper — a large, purplish food fish, Achoerodus gouldii, inhabiting waters off Australia and New Zealand, characterized by an enormous gape.
  • gropes — Plural form of grope.
  • groser — a gooseberry
  • grosse — Obsolete spelling of gross.
  • groszy — an aluminum coin of Poland, the 100th part of a zloty.
  • groton — a city in SE Connecticut.
  • grotto — a cave or cavern.
  • grotty — seedy; wretched; dirty.
  • grouch — to be sulky or morose; show discontent; complain, especially in an irritable way.
  • grough — a natural channel or fissure in a peat moor; a peat hag
  • ground — the act of grinding.
  • groupe — Obsolete spelling of group.
  • groups — Plural form of group.
  • grouse — any of numerous gallinaceous birds of the subfamily Tetraoninae. Compare black grouse, capercaillie, ruffed grouse, spruce grouse.
  • grouts — a thin, coarse mortar poured into various narrow cavities, as masonry joints or rock fissures, to fill them and consolidate the adjoining objects into a solid mass.
  • grouty — sulky; surly; bad-tempered.
  • groved — a small wood or forested area, usually with no undergrowth: a grove of pines.
  • grovel — to humble oneself or act in an abject manner, as in great fear or utter servility.
  • grover — a male given name.
  • groves — a small wood or forested area, usually with no undergrowth: a grove of pines.
  • grovet — a wrestling hold in which a wrestler in a kneeling position grips the head of his kneeling opponent with one arm and forces his shoulders down with the other
  • growan — decomposed granite.
  • growed — a simple past tense and past participle of grow.
  • growen — (obsolete) Past participle of grown.
  • grower — a person who grows something: He is a grower of flowers and vegetables.
  • growls — Plural form of growl.
  • growly — resembling a growl in pitch and harshness: This cold has made my voice growly.
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