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10-letter words containing g, t

  • get better — recover
  • get it off — to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension.
  • get off on — to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension.
  • get on for — to approach (a time, amount, age, etc.)
  • get out of — extricate oneself from
  • 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.
  • get the ax — to be executed by beheading
  • gethsemane — a garden east of Jerusalem, near the brook of Kedron: scene of Jesus' agony and betrayal. Matt. 26:36.
  • gettysburg — a borough in S Pennsylvania: Confederate forces defeated in a crucial battle of the Civil War fought near here on July 1–3, 1863; national cemetery and military park.
  • ghastfully — in a ghastful manner
  • ghastliest — Superlative form of ghastly.
  • ghettoised — Simple past tense and past participle of ghettoise.
  • ghettoized — Simple past tense and past participle of ghettoize.
  • ghettoizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ghettoize.
  • ghost crab — a whitish crab, Ocypode albicans, of sandy beaches from the eastern coast of the U.S. to Brazil.
  • ghost moth — swift (def 9).
  • ghost town — a town permanently abandoned by its inhabitants, as because of a business decline or because a nearby mine has been worked out.
  • ghost word — a word that has come into existence by error rather than by normal linguistic transmission, as through the mistaken reading of a manuscript, a scribal error, or a misprint.
  • ghost-weed — snow-on-the-mountain.
  • ghostliest — Superlative form of ghostly.
  • ghostwrite — (intransitive) To write under the name of another (especially literary works).
  • giacometti — Alberto [al-bair-toh;; Italian ahl-ber-taw] /ælˈbɛər toʊ;; Italian ɑlˈbɛr tɔ/ (Show IPA), 1901–66, Swiss sculptor and painter.
  • giant cane — a stick or short staff used to assist one in walking; walking stick.
  • giant cell — an exceptionally large cell, often possessing several nuclei, such as an osteoclast
  • giant clam — any of several huge clams of the family Tridacnidae, inhabiting the shallow waters of coral reefs in the tropical Indo-Pacific, as Tridacna gigas: some may weigh more than 500 pounds (225 kg).
  • giant crab — a large, deep-water Japanese spider crab, Macrocheira kaempferi, sometimes measuring 11 feet (3.4 meters) across from claw to claw.
  • giant kelp — any of various very large kelps of the genera Laminaria, Macrocystis, and Nereocystis.
  • giant reed — a tall grass, Arundo donax, of southern Europe, having woody stems and a spirelike flower cluster often 2 feet (60 cm) long.
  • giant star — a star having a diameter of from 10 to 100 times that of the sun, as Arcturus or Aldebaran.
  • giantesses — Plural form of giantess.
  • gift token — a piece of paper to a specified value, given as a present, that can be exchanged for goods (such as books, DVDs, toiletries, etc) in a shop
  • giftedness — The property of being gifted.
  • gigalitres — Plural form of gigalitre.
  • gigatonnes — Plural form of gigatonne.
  • gilbertian — of, relating to, or characteristic of the style or humor of Sir William S. Gilbert.
  • gilbertine — a member of a Christian order founded in approximately 1135 by St Gilbert of Sempringham, composed of nuns who followed the Cistercian rule and Augustinian canons who ministered to them. It was the only religious order of English origin and never spread to Europe
  • gill cleft — branchial cleft.
  • gillnetter — One who fishes using a gillnet.
  • gilt-edged — having the edge or edges gilded: gilt-edged paper.
  • gimlet eye — a sharp or piercing glance.
  • ginger nut — a small, brittle cookie flavored with ginger and molasses.
  • gingerroot — the rhizome of the ginger plant.
  • gingivitis — inflammation of the gums.
  • gipsy moth — a European moth, Lymantria dispar, introduced into North America, where it is a serious pest of shade trees: family Lymantriidae (or Liparidae)
  • girl scout — (sometimes initial capital letters) a member of an organization of girls (Girl Scouts) founded in the U.S. in 1912 by Juliette Low that seeks to develop certain skills, as well as health, citizenship, and character.
  • give birth — have a baby
  • give forth — to send forth; emit; issue
  • give it to — to present voluntarily and without expecting compensation; bestow: to give a birthday present to someone.
  • glacialist — a person who studies geological phenomena involving the action of ice, especially of glaciers.
  • glaciating — Present participle of glaciate.
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