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7-letter words containing g, r

  • gnasher — One who gnashes teeth.
  • go dark — (of a company) to remove itself from the register of major exchanges while continuing to trade
  • go hard — to cause trouble or unhappiness (to)
  • go over — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • go root — [Unix] To temporarily enter root mode in order to perform a privileged operation. This use is deprecated in Australia, where the verb "root" refers to animal sex. See su.
  • go sour — milk, etc.: turn bad
  • go-cart — a small carriage for young children to ride in; stroller.
  • go-kart — kart.
  • goaders — Plural form of goader.
  • gobbler — a person or thing that gobbles or consumes voraciously or quickly: a gobbler of science fiction.
  • goburra — The kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae).
  • goddard — Robert Hutchings [huhch-ingz] /ˈhʌtʃ ɪŋz/ (Show IPA), 1882–1945, U.S. physicist: pioneer in rocketry.
  • godfrey — a male given name: from Germanic words meaning “god” and “peace.”.
  • godlier — Comparative form of godly.
  • godroon — gadroon.
  • godward — Also, Godwards. toward God.
  • goering — Hermann Wilhelm [her-mahn vil-helm,, hur-muh n-wil-helm;; German her-mahn vil-helm] /ˈhɛr mɑn ˈvɪl hɛlm,, ˈhɜr mənˈwɪl hɛlm;; German ˈhɛr mɑn ˈvɪl hɛlm/ (Show IPA), 1893–1946, German field marshal and Nazi party leader.
  • goggler — a person who stares goggle-eyed.
  • goiters — Plural form of goiter.
  • goldarn — goddamn (used as a euphemism in expressions of anger, disgust, surprise, etc.).
  • goldurn — goldarn.
  • golfers — Plural form of golfer.
  • goliard — one of a class of wandering scholar-poets in Germany, France, and England, chiefly in the 12th and 13th centuries, noted as the authors of satirical Latin verse written in celebration of conviviality, sensual pleasures, etc.
  • gombergMoses, 1866–1947, U.S. chemist, born in Russia.
  • gomeral — a fool.
  • gomerel — a fool.
  • gomeril — a fool.
  • gompersSamuel, 1850–1924, U.S. labor leader, born in England: president of the American Federation of Labor 1886–94, 1896–1924.
  • goneril — (in Shakespeare's King Lear) the elder of Lear's two faithless daughters.
  • goobers — Plural form of goober.
  • gooders — Plural form of gooder.
  • goofier — Comparative form of goofy.
  • goopier — Comparative form of goopy.
  • goosery — a place for keeping geese
  • gophers — Plural form of gopher.
  • gopuram — A monumental tower, usually ornate, at the entrance of a temple, especially in Southern India.
  • gorcock — the male of the red grouse
  • gorcrow — a carrion crow
  • gordian — pertaining to Gordius, ancient king of Phrygia, who tied a knot (the Gordian knot) that, according to prophecy, was to be undone only by the person who was to rule Asia, and that was cut, rather than untied, by Alexander the Great.
  • gordita — A Mexican flatbread made from cornmeal and stuffed with meat, cheese, vegetables, or a sweet filling.
  • górecki — Henryk (Mikołaj). 1933–2010, Polish composer, best known for his sombre third symphony (1979)
  • gorgets — Plural form of gorget.
  • gorgias — c483–c375 b.c, Greek philosopher.
  • gorging — a narrow cleft with steep, rocky walls, especially one through which a stream runs.
  • gorgons — Plural form of gorgon.
  • goriest — covered or stained with gore; bloody.
  • gorilla — the largest of the anthropoid apes, Gorilla gorilla, terrestrial and vegetarian, of western equatorial Africa and the Kivu highlands, comprising the subspecies G. g. gorilla (western lowland gorilla) G. g. graueri (eastern lowland gorilla) and G. g. beringei (mountain gorilla) now rare.
  • gorizia — a city in NE Italy, on the Isonzo River, N of Trieste.
  • gorlitz — a city in E Germany, on the Neisse River, at the Polish boundary.
  • gormand — gourmand.
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