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7-letter words containing g, r, o, s

  • negroes — Plural form of negro.
  • ogreish — a monstrously ugly, cruel, or barbarous person.
  • ogreism — an occurrence of behaviour characteristic of an ogre
  • onagers — Plural form of onager.
  • onsagerLars, 1903–76, U.S. chemist, born in Norway: Nobel prize 1968.
  • oranges — a member of a European princely family ruling in the United Kingdom from 1688 to 1694 and in the Netherlands since 1815.
  • orgasms — Plural form of orgasm.
  • orgasum — Misspelling of orgasm.
  • orgiast — One who celebrates orgies.
  • origins — Plural form of origin.
  • orogens — an extensive belt of rocks deformed by orogeny, associated in places with plutonic and metamorphic rocks.
  • presong — of the period before a song is sung
  • progres — (language)   PROgrammed Graph REwriting Systems.
  • regloss — to gloss again or to give a new gloss to
  • regosol — a type of azonal soil consisting of unconsolidated material derived from freshly deposited alluvium or sands
  • rigours — strictness, severity, or harshness, as in dealing with people.
  • rodgers — a male given name, form of Roger.
  • roger's — a male given name: from Germanic words meaning “fame” and “spear.”.
  • roguish — pertaining to, characteristic of, or acting like a rogue; knavish or rascally.
  • rousing — exciting; stirring: a rousing song.
  • sag rod — (in a roof) a rod for preventing the sagging of an open-web steel joist that is used as a purlin with its depth at right angles to a roof slope.
  • saguaro — a tall, horizontally branched cactus, Carnegiea (or Cereus) gigantea, of Arizona and neighboring regions, yielding a useful wood and bearing an edible fruit: still locally common, though some populations have been reduced.
  • scoring — the record of points or strokes made by the competitors in a game or match.
  • scourge — a whip or lash, especially for the infliction of punishment or torture.
  • scroggy — any naturally short or stunted tree or bush, as a crab apple tree or blackthorn bush.
  • scrooge — Ebenezer [eb-uh-nee-zer] /ˌɛb əˈni zər/ (Show IPA) a miserly curmudgeon in Dickens' Christmas Carol.
  • scrouge — to crowd or press
  • seaborg — Glenn T(heodor) 1912–1999, U.S. chemist: chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission 1961–71; Nobel prize 1951.
  • senghor — Léopold Sédar [French ley-aw-pawld sey-dahr] /French leɪ ɔˈpɔld seɪˈdɑr/ (Show IPA), 1906–2001, African poet, teacher, and statesman: president of the Republic of Senegal 1960–80.
  • serpigo — (formerly) a creeping or spreading skin disease, as ringworm.
  • shoring — a supporting post or beam with auxiliary members, especially one placed obliquely against the side of a building, a ship in drydock, or the like; prop; strut.
  • signior — signor.
  • signora — a conventional Italian term of address or title of respect for a married woman, either used separately or prefixed to the name.
  • signore — a conventional Italian title of respect for a man, usually used separately; signor.
  • signori — a conventional Italian term of address or title of respect for a man, either used separately or prefixed to the name. Abbreviation: Sig., sig.
  • signory — seigniory.
  • slogger — to hit hard, as in boxing or cricket; slug.
  • snoring — loud breathing while asleep
  • snotrag — a handkerchief
  • soaring — an act or instance of soaring.
  • socager — a tenant holding land by socage; sokeman.
  • sorbing — to gather on a surface either by absorption, adsorption, or a combination of the two processes.
  • sorghum — a cereal grass, Sorghum bicolor (or S. vulgare), having broad, cornlike leaves and a tall, pithy stem bearing the grain in a dense terminal cluster.
  • sorting — a particular kind, species, variety, class, or group, distinguished by a common character or nature: to develop a new sort of painting; nice people, of course, but not really our sort.
  • souring — having an acid taste, resembling that of vinegar, lemon juice, etc.; tart.
  • sponger — a person or thing that sponges.
  • sporing — Biology. a walled, single- to many-celled, reproductive body of an organism, capable of giving rise to a new individual either directly or indirectly.
  • stodger — a dull or lifeless person
  • storage — the act of storing; state or fact of being stored: All my furniture is in storage.
  • storing — an establishment where merchandise is sold, usually on a retail basis.
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