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6-letter words containing g, r, e

  • forget — to cease or fail to remember; be unable to recall: to forget someone's name.
  • fridge — a refrigerator.
  • fringe — a decorative border of thread, cord, or the like, usually hanging loosely from a raveled edge or separate strip.
  • fugger — Jakob II [yah-kawp] /ˈyɑ kɔp/ (Show IPA), ("the Rich") 1459–1525, German financier, a member of a German family of bankers and merchants of the 14th to 17th centuries.
  • gabber — to talk or chat idly; chatter.
  • gadder — to move restlessly or aimlessly from one place to another: to gad about.
  • gaffer — the chief electrician on a motion-picture or television production.
  • gagger — a person who writes or tells gags; gagman.
  • gailer — Obsolete form of jailer.
  • gainer — a person or thing that gains.
  • gaiter — a covering of cloth or leather for the ankle and instep and sometimes also the lower leg, worn over the shoe or boot. Compare upper1 (def 7).
  • galère — group of people having a common interest
  • galore — in abundance; in plentiful amounts: food and drink galore.
  • gamers — Plural form of gamer.
  • gamier — having the tangy flavor or odor of game: I like the gamy taste of venison.
  • gammer — an old woman.
  • gander — a town in E Newfoundland, in Canada: airport on the great circle route between New York and northern Europe.
  • ganger — a foreman of a gang of laborers.
  • gaoler — jail.
  • gapers — Plural form of gaper.
  • gapier — Veterinary Pathology. a parasitic disease of poultry and other birds, characterized by frequent gaping due to infestation of the trachea and bronchi with gapeworms.
  • gapper — (baseball) A ball hit through the regions between the outfielders.
  • garage — a building or indoor area for parking or storing motor vehicles.
  • garbed — a fashion or mode of dress, especially of a distinctive, uniform kind: in the garb of a monk.
  • garble — to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: to garble instructions.
  • gardenAlexander, 1730?–91, U.S. naturalist, born in Scotland.
  • gareth — Arthurian Romance. nephew of King Arthur and a knight of the Round Table.
  • garget — Veterinary Pathology. inflammation of the udder of a cow; bovine mastitis.
  • gargle — to wash or rinse the throat or mouth with a liquid held in the throat and kept in motion by a stream of air from the lungs.
  • garner — to gather or deposit in or as if in a granary or other storage place.
  • garnetHenry Highland, 1815–82, U.S. clergyman and abolitionist.
  • garote — to execute by the garrote.
  • garred — Scot. to compel or force (someone) to do something.
  • garret — spall (def 1).
  • garter — Also called, British, sock suspender, suspender. an article of clothing for holding up a stocking or sock, usually an elastic band around the leg or an elastic strap hanging from a girdle or other undergarment.
  • garvey — a scowlike open boat, variously propelled, used by oyster and clam fishermen in Delaware Bay and off the coasts of Delaware and New Jersey.
  • garvie — a sprat
  • gasher — dreary or gloomy in appearance.
  • gasper — a cigarette.
  • gasserHerbert Spencer, 1888–1963, U.S. physiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1944.
  • gaster — (in ants, bees, wasps, and other hymenopterous insects) the part of the abdomen behind the petiole.
  • gaters — Southern U.S. Informal. alligator.
  • gather — to bring together into one group, collection, or place: to gather firewood; to gather the troops.
  • gaufer — a waffle
  • gauger — a person or thing that gauges.
  • gawker — Someone who gawks, someone who stares stupidly.
  • gawper — One who gawps.
  • gazers — to look steadily and intently, as with great curiosity, interest, pleasure, or wonder.
  • geared — 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.
  • geezer — an odd or eccentric man: the old geezer who sells shoelaces on the corner.
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