7-letter words containing g, r
- periwig — a wig, especially a peruke.
- perking — to become lively, cheerful, or vigorous, as after depression or sickness (usually followed by up): The patients all perked up when we played the piano for them.
- perugia — a city in central Umbria, in central Italy.
- petrog. — petrography
- phrygia — an ancient country in central and NW Asia Minor.
- pibgorn — an ancient wind instrument of Wales resembling the hornpipe.
- pierage — a fee that is charged to use a pier to accommodate a boat, ship, etc
- pierogi — a small dough envelope filled with mashed potato, meat, cheese, or vegetables, crimped to seal the edge and then boiled or fried, typically served with sour cream or onions.
- piggery — a pigsty or pig breeder's establishment.
- pignora — property held as security for a debt.
- pilgrim — a person who journeys, especially a long distance, to some sacred place as an act of religious devotion: pilgrims to the Holy Land.
- pingler — someone who fiddles with their food and eats little of it
- piragua — Also, pirogue. a canoe made by hollowing out a tree trunk.
- pirogen — (used with a plural verb) Jewish Cookery. small baked pastries filled with chopped chicken livers, onion, etc.
- pirogue — piragua (def 1).
- pledger — a solemn promise or agreement to do or refrain from doing something: a pledge of aid; a pledge not to wage war.
- pledgor — a person who deposits personal property as a pledge.
- plugger — a person or thing that plugs.
- plunger — Machinery. a pistonlike reciprocating part moving within the cylinder of a pump or hydraulic device.
- podagra — gouty inflammation of the great toe.
- porangi — crazy; mad
- porrigo — any disease of the scalp
- portage — a city in SW Michigan.
- porting — Military. the position of a rifle or other weapon when ported.
- potager — a small kitchen garden
- pouring — to send (a liquid, fluid, or anything in loose particles) flowing or falling, as from one container to another, or into, over, or on something: to pour a glass of milk; to pour water on a plant.
- prating — to talk excessively and pointlessly; babble: They prated on until I was ready to scream.
- praying — uttering prayers (to God or other object of worship)
- preaged — treated to appear older, usually prior to being used or purchased
- preeing — a test, trial, or taste; a test by sampling.
- pregame — of, relating to, or happening in the period just before a sports game: The coach was interviewed in a pregame broadcast.
- prepreg — material that is pre-impregnated with synthetic resin for further manufacture into reinforced plastic
- presage — a presentiment or foreboding.
- presong — of the period before a song is sung
- preying — an animal hunted or seized for food, especially by a carnivorous animal.
- pricing — the act or an instance of setting a price for a product or service
- priding — a high or inordinate opinion of one's own dignity, importance, merit, or superiority, whether as cherished in the mind or as displayed in bearing, conduct, etc.
- prigger — a thief
- primage — a small allowance formerly paid by a shipper to the master and crew of a vessel for the loading and care of the goods: now charged with the freight and retained by the shipowner.
- priming — the most flourishing stage or state.
- prisage — the right of the king to take a certain quantity of every cargo of wine imported.
- prising — pry2 .
- prizing — pry2 .
- proagon — (in ancient Greek comedy) a disputatious exchange, sometimes of a slapstick nature, between the chorus and the characters, or among the characters themselves, usually following the parodos and preceding the agon.
- probang — a long, slender, elastic rod with a sponge, ball, or the like, at the end, to be introduced into the esophagus or larynx, as for removing foreign bodies, or for introducing medication.
- probing — to search into or examine thoroughly; question closely: to probe one's conscience.
- prodigy — a person, especially a child or young person, having extraordinary talent or ability: a musical prodigy.
- prodrug — an inactive substance that is converted to a drug within the body by the action of enzymes or other chemicals.
- progeny — a descendant or offspring, as a child, plant, or animal.
- progged — to search or prowl about, as for plunder or food; forage.