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4-letter words containing g

  • beeg — Eye dialect of big.
  • begl — Back End Generator
  • bego — to beset, to harass
  • beng — Bachelor of Engineering
  • berg — Alban (Maria Johannes) (ˈalbaːn). 1885–1935, Austrian composer: a pupil of Schoenberg. His works include the operas Wozzeck (1921) and Lulu (1935), a violin concerto (1935), chamber works, and songs
  • bgsu — Biochemistry Graduate Student Union
  • biga — a chariot drawn by two horses
  • bigg — a type of barley
  • bing — a heap or pile, esp of spoil from a mine
  • biog — biography.
  • blag — To blag something such as a concert ticket means to persuade someone to give it to you free.
  • bldg — Bldg is a written abbreviation for building, and is used especially in the names of buildings.
  • blog — a journal or diary written for public viewing on a website and consisting typically of personal reflections, commentary on current events, etc. arranged chronologically
  • bogo — BOGO is a way of encouraging more sales of a product by offering customers another item of the same type, free or for a reduced price.
  • bogy — an imaginary evil being or spirit; goblin
  • bong — A bong is a long, deep sound such as the sound made by a big bell.
  • borg — Björn (bjœrn). born 1956, Swedish tennis player: Wimbledon champion 1976–80; French Open champion 1974–75, 1978–81
  • boyg — a troll-like creature; an ogre
  • brag — If you brag, you say in a very proud way that you have something or have done something.
  • brig — A brig is a type of ship with two masts and square sails.
  • brog — a bradawl
  • buag — [alt.fan.warlord] Big Ugly ASCII Graphic. Pejorative term for ugly ASCII ART, especially as found in sig blocks. For some reason, mutations of the head of Bart Simpson are particularly common in the least imaginative sig blocks. See warlording.
  • bugs — crazy
  • bung — A bung is a round piece of wood, cork, or rubber which you use to close the hole in a container such as a barrel or flask.
  • burg — a fortified town
  • byng — George, Viscount Torrington. 1663–1733, British admiral: defeated fleet of James Edward Stuart, the Old Pretender, off Scotland (1708); defeated Spanish fleet off Messina (1717)
  • cage — A cage is a structure of wire or metal bars in which birds or animals are kept.
  • cags — Plural form of cag.
  • cagy — cautious, wary, or shrewd: a cagey reply to the probing question.
  • cegb — (the former) Central Electricity Generating Board
  • ceng — chartered engineer
  • cgbr — Central Government Borrowing Requirement
  • cggl — Code-Generator Generator Language
  • cgol — (language)   A package providing ALGOL-like surface syntax for MACLISP, written by V.R. Pratt in 1977.
  • cgsu — Coleg Gwent Students Union
  • chg. — charge
  • chgd — charged
  • chog — the core of a piece of fruit
  • chug — When a vehicle chugs somewhere, it goes there slowly, noisily and with difficulty.
  • cigs — Chief of the Imperial General Staff
  • clag — sticky mud
  • cleg — another name for a horsefly, esp one of the genus Haematopota
  • clog — When something clogs a hole or place, it blocks it so that nothing can pass through.
  • cmdg — commanding
  • cmga — 1.   (body)   Computer Management Group of Australia 2.   (body)   Community of Massive Gaming Agency.
  • coag — (nautical) Alternative form of coak.
  • cogo — (application)   A subsystem of ICES aimed at coordinate geometry problems in civil engineering.
  • cogs — Plural form of cog.
  • cong — Informal. Vietcong.
  • cpag — Child Poverty Action Group
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