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

  • fording — a place where a river or other body of water is shallow enough to be crossed by wading.
  • foreign — of, relating to, or derived from another country or nation; not native: foreign cars.
  • forging — a special fireplace, hearth, or furnace in which metal is heated before shaping.
  • forking — an instrument having two or more prongs or tines, for holding, lifting, etc., as an implement for handling food or any of various agricultural tools.
  • forming — Present participle of form.
  • fouling — something that is foul.
  • fowling — the practice or sport of shooting or snaring birds.
  • fröding — Gustaf (ˈɡʊstav). 1860–1911, Swedish poet. His popular lyric verse includes the collections Guitar and Concertina (1891), New Poems (1894), and Splashes and Rags (1896)
  • fungoid — resembling a fungus; of the nature of a fungus.
  • gabions — Plural form of gabion.
  • gain on — catch up with
  • galopin — an errand-boy, especially one who works for a cook
  • ganoids — Plural form of ganoid.
  • ganoine — (zoology) A kind of bony tissue beneath the enamel of a ganoid scale.
  • gaoling — Present participle of gaol.
  • genious — Misspelling of genius.
  • genito- — genital and
  • genitor — a parent, especially a father.
  • genoise — a light yellow cake made with eggs and butter and typically layered, filled, and frosted or made into petits fours for serving.
  • genomic — a full set of chromosomes; all the inheritable traits of an organism.
  • gibbons — any small, slender, long-armed arboreal anthropoid ape of the genus Hylobates, of the East Indies and southern Asia: all gibbon species are reduced in number and some are very rare.
  • gigaton — one billion tons. Abbreviation: GT.
  • gillion — (rare) A thousand million, proposed as an alternative to the (now little used) British 'milliard' and the (ambiguous, in the UK) US 'billion'.
  • ginshop — a tavern where gin is mainly sold
  • gironde — an estuary in SW France, formed by the junction of the Garonne and Dordogne rivers. 45 miles (72 km) long.
  • gironny — divided into segments from the fesse point
  • glenoid — shallow or slightly cupped, as the articular cavities of the scapula and the temporal bone.
  • globing — Present participle of globe.
  • glonoin — nitroglycerin
  • gloving — Present participle of glove.
  • glowing — incandescent.
  • glozing — Present participle of gloze.
  • gluonic — (physics) Of, pertaining to, or mediated by gluons.
  • gniezno — a city in W central Poland, ENE of Posen: important in the early history of the country; 10th-century cathedral.
  • gnocchi — a dish of little dumplings made from potatoes, semolina, flour, or a combination of these ingredients.
  • gnomish — (in folklore) one of a species of diminutive beings, usually described as shriveled little old men, that inhabit the interior of the earth and act as guardians of its treasures; troll.
  • gnomist — a writer of aphorisms.
  • gnostic — pertaining to knowledge.
  • go into — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • goading — a stick with a pointed or electrically charged end, for driving cattle, oxen, etc.; prod.
  • goating — A scapegoating.
  • gobbing — Present participle of gob.
  • gobelin — made at the tapestry factory established in Paris in the 15th century by the Gobelins, a French family of dyers and weavers.
  • goblins — a grotesque sprite or elf that is mischievous or malicious toward people.
  • godding — the one Supreme Being, the creator and ruler of the universe.
  • godling — a minor god, especially one whose influence or authority is entirely local.
  • goering — Hermann Wilhelm [her-mahn vil-helm,, hur-muh n-wil-helm;; German her-mahn vil-helm] /ˈhɛr mɑn ˈvɪl hɛlm,, ˈhɜr mənˈwɪl hɛlm;; German ˈhɛr mɑn ˈvɪl hɛlm/ (Show IPA), 1893–1946, German field marshal and Nazi party leader.
  • goiania — a state in central Brazil. 247,826 sq. mi. (641,870 sq. km). Capital: Goiânia.
  • goldingLouis, 1895–1958, English novelist and essayist.
  • goldoni — Carlo [kahr-loh;; Italian kahr-law] /ˈkɑr loʊ;; Italian ˈkɑr lɔ/ (Show IPA), 1707–93, Italian dramatist.
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