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7-letter words containing i, g, n, o

  • covings — Plural form of coving.
  • cowling — a streamlined metal covering, esp one fitted around an aircraft engine
  • crowing — the sound made by a cock, particularly in the early morning
  • demoing — demonstration (defs 4, 6).
  • digonal — of or relating to a symmetry operation in which the original figure is reconstructed after a 180° turn about an axis
  • digoxin — a cardiac glycoside of purified digitalis, C 41 H 64 O 14 , derived from the plant leaves of Digitalis lanata and widely used in the treatment of congestive heart failure.
  • dingoes — Alternative spelling of dingosa; Plural form of dingo.
  • disegno — drawing or design: a term used during the 16th and 17th centuries to designate the formal discipline required for the representation of the ideal form of an object in the visual arts, especially as expressed in the linear structure of a work of art.
  • disgown — to remove a gown from (esp in a religious or academic sense)
  • doating — dote.
  • docking — the solid or fleshy part of an animal's tail, as distinguished from the hair.
  • dodging — Present participle of dodge.
  • doffing — to remove or take off, as clothing.
  • dogging — a domesticated canid, Canis familiaris, bred in many varieties.
  • dogskin — Leather made of or imitating dog's skin, especially as used for gloves.
  • domingo — Placido [plah-si-doh;; Spanish plah-thee-th aw,, -see-] /ˈplɑ sɪˌdoʊ;; Spanish ˈplɑ θi ðɔ,, -si-/ (Show IPA), born 1941, Spanish operatic tenor, in the U.S.
  • donning — to put on or dress in: to don one's clothes.
  • donting — contraction of do not.
  • dooming — fate or destiny, especially adverse fate; unavoidable ill fortune: In exile and poverty, he met his doom.
  • dopings — Plural form of doping.
  • dorking — one of an English breed of chicken, having five toes on each foot instead of the usual four.
  • dossing — a place to sleep, especially in a cheap lodging house.
  • dotting — a small, roundish mark made with or as if with a pen.
  • dousing — Present participle of douse.
  • douting — Present participle of dout.
  • dowding — Baron Hugh Caswall Tremenheere, nicknamed Stuffy. 1882–1970, British air chief marshal. As commander in chief of Fighter Command (1936–40), he contributed greatly to the British victory in the Battle of Britain (1940)
  • downing — a downward movement; descent.
  • dowsing — to plunge or be plunged into a liquid.
  • droning — to make a dull, continued, low, monotonous sound; hum; buzz.
  • droving — Present participle of drove.
  • echoing — (of a sound) Be repeated or reverberate after the original sound has stopped.
  • eloping — Present participle of elope.
  • emoting — Present participle of emote.
  • enoding — Present participle of enode.
  • epigone — A less distinguished follower or imitator of someone, especially an artist or philosopher.
  • epigoni — the descendants of the Seven against Thebes, who undertook a second expedition against the city and eventually captured and destroyed it
  • eroding — Present participle of erode.
  • evoking — Bring or recall to the conscious mind.
  • flowing — moving in or as in a stream: flowing water.
  • foaling — a young horse, mule, or related animal, especially one that is not yet one year of age.
  • foaming — a collection of minute bubbles formed on the surface of a liquid by agitation, fermentation, etc.: foam on a glass of beer.
  • fobbing — Archaic. to cheat; deceive.
  • fogging — a cloudlike mass or layer of minute water droplets or ice crystals near the surface of the earth, appreciably reducing visibility. Compare ice fog, mist, smog.
  • foiling — Present participle of foil.
  • foining — Present participle of foin.
  • folding — to confine (sheep or other domestic animals) in a fold.
  • fooling — a silly or stupid person; a person who lacks judgment or sense.
  • footing — the basis or foundation on which anything is established.
  • fopling — a vain, affected person
  • forcing — (of a bid) requiring by convention a response from one’s partner, no matter how weak their hand may be.
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