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8-letter words containing g, t

  • coopting — to elect into a body by the votes of the existing members.
  • coregent — a joint regent
  • corteges — Plural form of cortege.
  • costings — Plural form of costing.
  • cotingid — (zoology) Any member of the Cotingidae.
  • cottager — a person who lives in a cottage
  • cottages — Plural form of cottage.
  • cottagey — of or resembling a cottage
  • counting — Not counting a particular thing means not including that thing. Counting a particular thing means including that thing.
  • courting — Law. a place where justice is administered. a judicial tribunal duly constituted for the hearing and determination of cases. a session of a judicial assembly.
  • coveting — Present participle of covet.
  • crafting — an art, trade, or occupation requiring special skill, especially manual skill: the craft of a mason.
  • cragfast — stranded or stuck on a crag
  • creating — to cause to come into being, as something unique that would not naturally evolve or that is not made by ordinary processes.
  • cresting — an ornamental ridge along the top of a roof, wall, etc
  • crofting — In Scotland, crofting is the activity of farming on small pieces of land.
  • crusting — Present participle of crust.
  • csg-tree — (graphics)   (Or "status tree"?) An approach used in ray tracing to evaluate constructive solid geometry structures.
  • cultigen — a species of plant that is known only as a cultivated form and did not originate from a wild type
  • curating — Chiefly British. a member of the clergy employed to assist a rector or vicar.
  • cut plug — compressed chewing tobacco in a portion-sized cake.
  • cutglass — Made of cut glass.
  • cutgrass — the general name for any grass of the genus Leersia, native to the Americas and Eurasia
  • cuttings — Cuttings are small pieces of rock removed by the drill bit.
  • cuttling — to fold (cloth) face to face after finishing.
  • cytogeny — (biology) cell production or development; cytogenesis.
  • cytology — the study of plant and animal cells, including their structure, function, and formation
  • dagestan — a constituent republic of S Russia, on the Caspian Sea: annexed from Persia in 1813; rich mineral resources. Capital: Makhachkala. Pop: 2 584 200 (2002). Area: 50 278 sq km (19 416 sq miles)
  • dagobert — a Merovingian King of the Franks, who lived c.603-639, and made Paris his capital
  • datagram — a self-contained unit of data transmitted in a packet-switched network
  • daughter — Someone's daughter is their female child.
  • daunting — Something that is daunting makes you feel slightly afraid or worried about dealing with it.
  • daylight — Daylight is the natural light that there is during the day, before it gets dark.
  • de grootHuig [hœikh] /hœɪx/ (Show IPA), Hugo Grotius.
  • debating — the activity of taking part in debates
  • debitage — lithic debris and discards found at the sites where stone tools and weapons were made.
  • debiting — the recording or an entry of debt in an account.
  • debuting — a first public appearance on a stage, on television, etc.
  • decating — a finishing process for making fabric more lustrous, for improving the tactile quality of the nap, and for setting the material to reduce shrinkage.
  • degusted — Simple past tense and past participle of degust.
  • degutted — to remove the entrails of; disembowel; gut.
  • deighton — Len. born 1929, British thriller writer. His books include The Ipcress File (1962), Bomber (1970), and the trilogy Berlin Game, Mexico Set, and London Match (1983–85)
  • delegate — A delegate is a person who is chosen to vote or make decisions on behalf of a group of other people, especially at a conference or a meeting.
  • deleting — Present participle of delete.
  • deligate — (surgery, dated, transitive) To bind up; to bandage.
  • deligent — Archaic spelling of diligent.
  • delights — Plural form of delight.
  • demoting — Present participle of demote.
  • denegate — (obsolete, transitive) To deny.
  • denoting — to be a mark or sign of; indicate: A fever often denotes an infection.
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