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7-letter words containing g, u, r

  • rougail — a combination of condiments and spices, as ginger, thyme, pimiento, and tomatoes, used especially in Creole cookery.
  • roughen — make rough
  • rougher — something that is rough, especially rough ground.
  • roughie — a small food fish of the family Arripididae, found in southern and western Australian waters
  • roughly — having a coarse or uneven surface, as from projections, irregularities, or breaks; not smooth: rough, red hands; a rough road.
  • rouging — any of various red cosmetics for coloring the cheeks or lips.
  • rouming — the division of common pasture into individual portions
  • rousing — exciting; stirring: a rousing song.
  • routing — a bellow.
  • rubbing — an act or instance of rubbing: an alcohol rub.
  • ruching — material for making a ruche.
  • rucking — a fold or wrinkle; crease.
  • rug rat — a child not yet walking
  • rugging — a bulky, coarse fabric with a full nap, used as a floor covering.
  • rugglesCarl, 1876–1971, U.S. composer.
  • ruiningruins, the remains of a building, city, etc., that has been destroyed or that is in disrepair or a state of decay: We visited the ruins of ancient Greece.
  • rummage — to search thoroughly or actively through (a place, receptacle, etc.), especially by moving around, turning over, or looking through contents.
  • runanga — a Māori assembly or council
  • running — an act or instance, or a period of running: a five-minute run before breakfast.
  • rushing — the act of rushing; a rapid, impetuous, or violent onward movement.
  • rusting — Also called iron rust. the red or orange coating that forms on the surface of iron when exposed to air and moisture, consisting chiefly of ferric hydroxide and ferric oxide formed by oxidation.
  • rutting — the periodically recurring sexual excitement of the deer, goat, sheep, etc.
  • rya rug — a decorative hand-woven area rug or tapestry of Scandinavian origin, with a thick pile and, usually, an abstract design
  • saguaro — a tall, horizontally branched cactus, Carnegiea (or Cereus) gigantea, of Arizona and neighboring regions, yielding a useful wood and bearing an edible fruit: still locally common, though some populations have been reduced.
  • scourge — a whip or lash, especially for the infliction of punishment or torture.
  • scrouge — to crowd or press
  • sergius — died 1012, pope 1009–12.
  • sevruga — a species of sturgeon, Acipenser stellatus, of the Caspian and Black seas.
  • slugger — a person who strikes hard, especially a boxer noted for the ability to deliver hard punches.
  • smudger — a person or thing that smudges
  • smugger — contentedly confident of one's ability, superiority, or correctness; complacent.
  • snugger — warmly comfortable or cozy, as a place, accommodations, etc.: a snug little house.
  • sorghum — a cereal grass, Sorghum bicolor (or S. vulgare), having broad, cornlike leaves and a tall, pithy stem bearing the grain in a dense terminal cluster.
  • souring — having an acid taste, resembling that of vinegar, lemon juice, etc.; tart.
  • splurge — to indulge oneself in some luxury or pleasure, especially a costly one: They splurged on a trip to Europe.
  • splurgy — ostentatious
  • spragueFrank Julian, 1857–1934, U.S. electrical engineer and inventor.
  • spruing — Metallurgy. an opening through which molten metal is poured into a mold. the waste metal left in this opening after casting.
  • sturgesPreston, 1898–1959, U.S. playwright and screenwriter.
  • sturgisRussell, 1836–1909, U.S. architect and author.
  • subring — a subset of a ring that is a subgroup under addition and that is closed under multiplication. Compare ring1 (def 22).
  • sugared — covered, mixed, or sweetened with sugar.
  • sugarer — someone who sugars off, a producer of maple syrup
  • sungari — Songhua.
  • super-g — a slalom race in which the course is longer and has more widely spaced gates than in a giant slalom.
  • surfing — the swell of the sea that breaks upon a shore or upon shoals.
  • surgent — surging
  • surgeon — a physician who specializes in surgery.
  • surgery — the art, practice, or work of treating diseases, injuries, or deformities by manual or operative procedures.
  • surging — a strong, wavelike, forward movement, rush, or sweep: the onward surge of an angry mob.
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