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9-letter words containing g, r, e, n, d, a

  • dragqueen — Alternative form of drag queen.
  • drainages — Plural form of drainage.
  • dungareed — wearing dungarees
  • dungareesdungarees. work clothes, overalls, etc., of blue denim. blue jeans.
  • earringed — having or wearing earrings
  • end organ — the expanded end of a peripheral motor or sensory nerve
  • endangers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of endanger.
  • endearing — Inspiring love or affection.
  • engarland — to cover or surround with a garland
  • engrafted — Simple past tense and past participle of engraft.
  • engrained — Simple past tense and past participle of engrain.
  • estranged — (of a person) no longer close or affectionate to someone; alienated.
  • feedgrain — any cereal grain used as a feed for livestock, poultry, or other animals.
  • gabardine — Also, gaberdine. a firm, tightly woven fabric of worsted, cotton, polyester, or other fiber, with a twill weave.
  • gaberdine — Also, gabardine. a long, loose coat or frock for men, worn in the Middle Ages, especially by Jews.
  • gandering — Present participle of gander.
  • ganderism — foolish behaviour
  • gangrened — Infected with gangrene, gangrenous.
  • gardeners — Plural form of gardener.
  • gardenful — An amount sufficient to fill a garden.
  • gardenias — Plural form of gardenia.
  • gardening — a plot of ground, usually near a house, where flowers, shrubs, vegetables, fruits, or herbs are cultivated.
  • garlanded — a wreath or festoon of flowers, leaves, or other material, worn for ornament or as an honor or hung on something as a decoration: A garland of laurel was placed on the winner's head.
  • garlander — One who makes or bears a garland.
  • garmented — (poetic) Wearing a garment; attired.
  • garnetted — Textiles. to reduce (waste material) to its fibrous state for reuse in textile manufacturing.
  • garnished — Simple past tense and past participle of garnish.
  • gear down — Machinery. a part, as a disk, wheel, or section of a shaft, having cut teeth of such form, size, and spacing that they mesh with teeth in another part to transmit or receive force and motion. an assembly of such parts. one of several possible arrangements of such parts in a mechanism, as an automobile transmission, for affording different relations of torque and speed between the driving and the driven machinery, or for permitting the driven machinery to run in either direction: first gear; reverse gear. a mechanism or group of parts performing one function or serving one purpose in a complex machine: steering gear.
  • gendarmes — Plural form of gendarme.
  • generated — to bring into existence; cause to be; produce.
  • geraldine — a female given name: derived from Gerald.
  • geraldton — a seaport in W Australia.
  • germander — any of several plants or shrubs belonging to the genus Teucrium, of the mint family, as T. chamaedrys, of Europe, and T. canadense, of eastern North America.
  • germanide — (chemistry) any binary compound of germanium and a more electropositive element.
  • gerundial — (in certain languages, as Latin) a form regularly derived from a verb and functioning as a noun, having in Latin all case forms but the nominative, as Latin dicendī gen., dicendō, dat., abl., etc., “saying.”. See also gerundive (def 1).
  • gesneriad — any of various, chiefly tropical plants of the gesneria family.
  • girandole — a rotating and radiating firework.
  • glandered — affected with glanders.
  • godparent — a godfather or godmother.
  • goldarned — goddamn (used as a euphemism in expressions of anger, disgust, surprise, etc.).
  • goosander — a common merganser, Mergus merganser, of Eurasia and North America.
  • gradients — Plural form of gradient.
  • grand feu — a firing of ceramics at a high temperature.
  • grand pre — a village in central Nova Scotia, on Minas Basin: locale of Longfellow's Evangeline.
  • grandeurs — the quality or state of being impressive or awesome: the grandeur of the Rocky Mountains.
  • grandezza — Magnificent or stately appearance; grandeur.
  • grandgentCharles Hall, 1862–1939, U.S. philologist and essayist.
  • grandiose — affectedly grand or important; pompous: grandiose words.
  • grandness — impressive in size, appearance, or general effect: grand mountain scenery.
  • grandsire — a grandfather.
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