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10-letter words containing g, r, i, f

  • freight-in — Freight-in is the cost of having goods or materials delivered to a business for manufacture or resale.
  • freightage — the transportation of goods.
  • freighters — Plural form of freighter.
  • freighting — Present participle of freight.
  • freshening — Present participle of freshen.
  • fright wig — a wig of wild, unruly hair, especially hair projecting outward in all directions, as worn by some clowns and comedians to give a comic effect of extreme fright or excitement.
  • frightened — thrown into a fright; afraid; scared; terrified: a frightened child cowering in the corner.
  • frightener — to make afraid or fearful; throw into a fright; terrify; scare.
  • frightfull — Archaic form of frightful.
  • frightless — (obsolete) Free from fright; fearless.
  • frightsome — Frightening; frightful; fearful; causing fear.
  • frigidaire — (now historical) A refrigerator.
  • frigidness — The state of being frigid; frigidity; coldness.
  • frigmarole — a jocular term for foreplay when considered, esp from the man’s point of view, to be a tiresome prelude to the main event
  • frigorific — causing or producing cold.
  • fringehead — any fish of the genus Neoclinus, characterized by a row of fleshy processes on the head, as N. blanchardi (sarcastic fringehead) of California coastal waters.
  • fringillid — Also, fringilline [frin-jil-ahyn, -in] /frɪnˈdʒɪl aɪn, -ɪn/ (Show IPA). belonging or pertaining to the family Fringillidae, comprising the finches and related birds.
  • frittering — Present participle of fritter.
  • frog's-bit — an aquatic, floating plant, Hydrocharis morsus-ranae, of Eurasia, having thick, roundish, spongy leaves.
  • frogfishes — Plural form of frogfish.
  • frolicking — merry play; merriment; gaiety; fun.
  • frowningly — While or as if frowning.
  • frugalista — (informal) A person (especially a woman) who is fashionable while being thrifty.
  • frying pan — A frying pan is a flat metal pan with a long handle, in which you fry food.
  • frying-pan — a shallow, long-handled pan in which food is fried.
  • fulgurites — Plural form of fulgurite.
  • full-grain — (of leather) having the original grain surface intact.
  • fumigators — Plural form of fumigator.
  • fumigatory — having the ability to fumigate; relating to fumigation
  • funny girl — a woman who is funny or who is a comedienne
  • furbishing — Present participle of furbish.
  • furnishing — paper pulp and any ingredients added to it prior to its introduction into a papermaking machine.
  • furthering — at or to a greater distance; farther: I'm too tired to go further.
  • gaffrigged — (of a sailboat) having one or more gaff sails.
  • gal friday — Older Use: Sometimes Offensive. a woman who acts as a general assistant in a business office or to an executive and has a wide variety of especially secretarial and clerical duties.
  • gangliform — having the form of a ganglion.
  • gas fitter — a person who installs gas pipes and apparatus in buildings.
  • gauffering — an ornamental plaiting used for frills and borders, as on women's caps.
  • gearshifts — Plural form of gearshift.
  • gentrified — very or excessively refined or elegant.
  • gentrifier — to alter (a deteriorated urban neighborhood) through the buying and renovation of houses and stores by upper- or middle-income families or individuals, raising property values but often displacing low-income families and small businesses.
  • get rid of — to clear, disencumber, or free of something objectionable (usually followed by of): I want to rid the house of mice. In my opinion, you'd be wise to rid yourself of the smoking habit.
  • ginglyform — (anatomy, rare) ginglymoid.
  • girlfriend — a frequent or favorite female companion; sweetheart.
  • give forth — to send forth; emit; issue
  • glandiform — (anatomy) Shaped like, resembling, or characteristic of glands.
  • glorifying — Present participle of glorify.
  • god forbid — If you say God forbid, you are expressing your hope that something will not happen.
  • godfearing — Acting with obedience to rules established by a deity out of fear of the power of that deity.
  • good grief — keen mental suffering or distress over affliction or loss; sharp sorrow; painful regret.
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