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9-letter words containing g, o

  • good luck — good fortune
  • good name — reputation
  • good news — someone or something that is positive, encouraging, uplifting, desirable, or the like.
  • good self — a polite way of referring to or addressing a person (or persons), used following your, his, her, or their
  • good shit — drug that is unadulterated
  • good show — excellent, that's good
  • good sort — a person of a kindly and likable disposition
  • good time — time deducted from an inmate's sentence for good behavior while in prison.
  • good turn — a helpful and friendly act; good deed; favour
  • good will — friendly disposition; benevolence; kindness.
  • good-copy — an imitation, reproduction, or transcript of an original: a copy of a famous painting.
  • good-time — time deducted from an inmate's sentence for good behavior while in prison.
  • goodfaced — with a handsome face
  • goodfella — a gangster, esp one in the Mafia
  • goodiness — the quality of being a goody
  • goodnesse — Obsolete spelling of goodness.
  • goodnight — a farewell or leave-taking: He said his good-nights before leaving the party.
  • goodspeedEdgar Johnson, 1871–1962, U.S. Biblical scholar and translator.
  • goodwilly — a volunteer.
  • goody bag — A goody bag is a bag of little gifts, often given away by manufacturers in order to encourage people to try their products.
  • gooeyness — The state or property of being gooey.
  • goofballs — Plural form of goofball.
  • goofiness — ridiculous; silly; wacky; nutty: a goofy little hat.
  • goofproof — (of a product, procedure, etc.) designed to be simple enough for anyone to use or implement.
  • gooped up — sticky with goop
  • goopiness — the quality of being goopy
  • goosander — a common merganser, Mergus merganser, of Eurasia and North America.
  • goose bay — an air base in S central Labrador, in Newfoundland, in E Canada, on the great circle route between New York and London: used as a fuel stop by some transatlantic airplanes.
  • goose egg — the numeral zero, often used to indicate the failure of a team to score in a game or unit of a game: a pitchers' duel, with nothing but goose eggs on the scoreboard.
  • goosebump — The bumps on a person's skin, at the base of body hair, which may involuntarily develop when a person is cold or experiences strong emotions.
  • goosedown — Down from a goose.
  • goosefish — angler (def 3).
  • goosefoot — any of numerous, often weedy plants of the genus Chenopodium, having inconspicuous greenish flowers.
  • goosegogs — gooseberry.
  • gooseherd — a person who tends geese.
  • gooselike — Resembling or characteristic of a goose.
  • gooseneck — a curved object resembling the neck of a goose, often of flexible construction, as in the shaft of a gooseneck lamp.
  • goosestep — Alternative form of goose-step.
  • goosewing — the weather clew of a square sail, held taut when the lee side of the sail is furled.
  • gophering — any of several ground squirrels of the genus Citellus, of the prairie regions of North America.
  • gorakhpur — a city in SE Uttar Pradesh, in N India.
  • gorbachev — Mikhail S(ergeyevich) [mi-kahyl sur-gey-uh-vich,, mi-keyl;; Russian myi-khuh-yeel syir-gye-yi-vyich] /mɪˈkaɪl sɜrˈgeɪ ə vɪtʃ,, mɪˈkeɪl;; Russian myɪ xʌˈyil syɪrˈgyɛ yɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), born 1931, Soviet political leader: general secretary of the Communist Party 1985–91; president of the Soviet Union 1988–91; Nobel Peace Prize 1990.
  • gorchakov — Prince Aleksander Mikhailovich [al-ig-zan-der mi-hahy-luh-vich,, -zahn-;; Russian uh-lyi-ksahndr myi-khahy-luh-vyich] /ˌæl ɪgˈzæn dər mɪˈhaɪ lə vɪtʃ,, -ˈzɑn-;; Russian ʌ lyɪˈksɑndr myɪˈxaɪ lə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1798–1883, Russian diplomat and statesman.
  • gorehound — an enthusiast of gory horror films
  • gorgonian — any of numerous alcyonarian corals of the order Gorgonacea, having a usually branching, horny or calcareous skeleton.
  • gorgonise — turn to stone
  • gorgonize — to affect as a Gorgon; hypnotize; petrify.
  • gorilloid — Lb anatomy Resembling (that of) a gorilla.
  • goslarite — hydrated zinc sulphate
  • gospelers — Plural form of gospeler.
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