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6-letter words containing g, o, s

  • socage — a tenure of land held by the tenant in performance of specified services or by payment of rent, and not requiring military service.
  • soigne — carefully or elegantly done, operated, or designed.
  • solgel — pertaining to alternation between the sol and gel states, as in the pseudopodia of amebas.
  • soling — the bottom or under surface of the foot.
  • songka — a river in SE Asia, flowing SE from SW China through Indochina to the Gulf of Tonkin. 500 miles (800 km) long.
  • sontagSusan, 1933–2004, U.S. critic, novelist, and essayist.
  • soogee — to clean a ship using a special solution
  • sorage — the first year in hawk's life
  • sorgho — sorgo.
  • soring — the practice of making the front feet of a show horse sore, as by bruising or blistering, so as to force it to take high, exaggerated steps in exhibitions
  • sought — simple past tense and past participle of seek.
  • sowing — to scatter (seed) over land, earth, etc., for growth; plant.
  • spigot — a small peg or plug for stopping the vent of a cask.
  • sponge — any aquatic, chiefly marine animal of the phylum Porifera, having a porous structure and usually a horny, siliceous or calcareous internal skeleton or framework, occurring in large, sessile colonies.
  • spongy — of the nature of or resembling a sponge; light, porous, and elastic or readily compressible, as pith or bread.
  • stingo — strong beer.
  • stodge — to stuff full, especially with food or drink; gorge.
  • stodgy — heavy, dull, or uninteresting; tediously commonplace; boring: a stodgy Victorian novel.
  • stogie — a long, slender, roughly made, inexpensive cigar.
  • stooge — an entertainer who feeds lines to the main comedian and usually serves as the butt of his or her jokes.
  • storge — natural or instinctual affection, as of a parent for a child
  • strong — having, showing, or able to exert great bodily or muscular power; physically vigorous or robust: a strong boy.
  • sundog — parhelion.
  • tostig — died 1066, earl of Northumbria (1055–65), brother of King Harold II. He joined the Norwegian forces that invaded England in 1066 and died at Stamford Bridge
  • toughs — strong and durable; not easily broken or cut.
  • troggs — loyalty; fidelity
  • tsonga — a Bantu language spoken in Mozambique, Zambia, and South Africa.
  • ugsome — horrid; loathsome.
  • vosges — a range of low mountains in NE France: highest peak, 4668 feet (1423 meters).
  • wagons — Plural form of wagon.
  • wodges — Plural form of wodge.
  • wrongs — Plural form of wrong.
  • yogism — a school of Hindu philosophy advocating and prescribing a course of physical and mental disciplines for attaining liberation from the material world and union of the self with the Supreme Being or ultimate principle.
  • youngs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of young.
  • zygose — the union of two gametes; conjugation.
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