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8-letter words containing g, t, d

  • knighted — a mounted soldier serving under a feudal superior in the Middle Ages.
  • ledgment — (architecture) A stringcourse or horizontal suit of mouldings, such as the base mouldings of a building.
  • lodgment — the act of lodging.
  • megadebt — An enormous debt.
  • megadont — macrodont.
  • midnight — the middle of the night; twelve o'clock at night.
  • migrated — to go from one country, region, or place to another. Synonyms: move, resettle, relocate. Antonyms: remain.
  • misdight — to mismanage or treat badly
  • mitnaged — an orthodox opponent of Chassidism
  • montaged — Simple past tense and past participle of montage.
  • nutsedge — An invasive sedge with small edible nutlike tubers.
  • old goat — an elderly man who is disliked, especially for being mean to or disapproving of younger people.
  • outdodge — to surpass in dodging
  • outdoing — Present participle of outdo.
  • outguard — a guard placed furthest away from the main contingent of an army
  • outguide — a folder in a filing system
  • outraged — Simple past tense and past participle of outrage.
  • petdingo — (tool)   An Estelle to C++ translator.
  • plighted — to pledge (one's troth) in engagement to marry.
  • postdrug — following the administration of a drug
  • postgrad — A postgrad is the same as a postgraduate.
  • radiguet — Raymond (rɛmɔ̃). 1903–23, French novelist; the author of The Devil in the Flesh (1923) and Count d'Orgel (1924)
  • redigest — to digest again
  • redlight — a red lamp, used as a traffic signal to mean “stop.”.
  • rfid tag — RFID tags are barcodes that make use of radio waves to send information tracking individual products at every stage, from delivery to stockroom to checkout, in a networked system.
  • ridgetop — the summit of a ridge
  • rigidity — stiff or unyielding; not pliant or flexible; hard: a rigid strip of metal.
  • rutledgeAnn, 1816–35, fiancée of Abraham Lincoln.
  • slighted — small in amount, degree, etc.: a slight increase; a slight odor.
  • staggard — a four-year-old male red deer.
  • standing — rank or status, especially with respect to social, economic, or personal position, reputation, etc.: He had little standing in the community.
  • steading — the place of a person or thing as occupied by a successor or substitute: The nephew of the queen came in her stead.
  • stegodon — any extinct elephantlike mammal of the genus Stegodon, from the late Pliocene and Pleistocene epochs, usually considered to be directly ancestral to the modern elephant.
  • striding — to walk with long steps, as with vigor, haste, impatience, or arrogance.
  • stringed — fitted with strings (often used in combination): a five-stringed banjo.
  • studding — a boss, knob, nailhead, or other protuberance projecting from a surface or part, especially as an ornament.
  • studying — application of the mind to the acquisition of knowledge, as by reading, investigation, or reflection: long hours of study.
  • tagboard — a strong cardboard suitable for tags or posters.
  • targeted — an object, usually marked with concentric circles, to be aimed at in shooting practice or contests.
  • teenaged — Teenaged people are aged between thirteen and nineteen.
  • the aged — old people
  • the dogs — greyhound racing
  • the good — those who are good
  • the grid — the national network of transmission lines, pipes, etc, by which electricity, gas, or water is distributed
  • thudding — a dull sound, as of a heavy blow or fall.
  • tightwad — a close-fisted or stingy person.
  • tigridia — any plant of the bulbous genus Tigridia, native to subtropical and tropical America, esp T. pavonia, the tiger flower or peacock tiger flower, grown for its large strikingly marked red, white, or yellow concave flowers: family Iridaceae
  • titograd — former name (1945–92) of Podgorica.
  • toad bug — any of several small broad aquatic insect-eating hemipterous insects of the family Gelastocoridae, having toadlike characteristics.
  • toadying — an obsequious flatterer; sycophant.
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