0%

9-letter words containing i, g, u, a

  • augustine — Saint. 354–430 ad, one of the Fathers of the Christian Church; bishop of Hippo in North Africa (396–430), who profoundly influenced both Catholic and Protestant theology. His most famous works are Confessions, a spiritual autobiography, and De Civitate Dei, a vindication of the Christian Church. Feast day: Aug 28
  • ausgleich — the agreement (1867) that established the Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary
  • auspicing — (AU) administration of a grant by one group on behalf of another.
  • authoring — Authoring is the creation of documents, especially for the Internet.
  • autogenic — Self-produced.
  • autogiros — Plural form of autogiro.
  • autoguide — a traffic information transmission system designed to stop congestion
  • automagic — done with such ease and speed as to seem like magic
  • avouching — Present participle of avouch.
  • baigneuse — a day bed of the Empire period, having a back sloping and curving to form a rounded head and foot.
  • baragouin — incomprehensible language; gibberish
  • bedaubing — Present participle of bedaub.
  • beguinage — a convent for members of the Beguine sisterhood
  • biangular — having two angles or corners.
  • bigarreau — any of several heart-shaped varieties of sweet cherry that have firm flesh
  • biguanide — any of a class of compounds some of which are used in the treatment of certain forms of diabetes
  • bilingual — Bilingual means involving or using two languages.
  • bit gauge — a device for stopping a bit when it has reached a desired depth.
  • bourguiba — Habib ben Ali (hæˈbɪb bɛn ˈɑːlɪ). 1903–2000, Tunisian statesman: president of Tunisia (1957–87); a moderate and an advocate of gradual social change. He was deposed in a coup and kept under house arrest for the rest of his life
  • bulgarian — Bulgarian means belonging or relating to Bulgaria, or to its people, language, or culture.
  • bungaloid — resembling a bungalow or bungalows or characterized by bungalows or structures resembling bungalows
  • calcifuge — any plant that thrives in acid soils but not in lime-rich soils
  • callusing — Pathology, Physiology. a hardened or thickened part of the skin; a callosity. a new growth of osseous matter at the ends of a fractured bone, serving to unite them.
  • capturing — Present participle of capture.
  • carousing — to engage in a drunken revel: They caroused all night.
  • caucusing — Present participle of caucus.
  • causalgia — a burning sensation along the course of a peripheral nerve together with local changes in the appearance of the skin
  • causalgic — relating to pain of the nerves
  • chu kiang — Zhu Jiang.
  • ciguatera — food poisoning caused by a ciguatoxin in seafood
  • cingulate — Anatomy, Zoology. a belt, zone, or girdlelike part.
  • conjugial — A form of \"conjugal\" used by Swedenborg and his followers, used to distinguish their ideas about marital relations.
  • contagium — the specific virus or other direct cause of any infectious disease
  • couraging — Present participle of courage.
  • cousinage — a kinship or relationship
  • crusading — campaigning
  • curtilage — the enclosed area of land adjacent to a dwelling house
  • dadgummit — (US, euphemistic) goddammit.
  • daubingly — in a coating or smearing manner
  • devaluing — to deprive of value; reduce the value of.
  • dialogued — Simple past tense and past participle of dialogue.
  • dialogues — Plural form of dialogue.
  • difflugia — a genus of ameboid protozoans that construct a shell of cemented sand grains.
  • divulgate — to make publicly known; publish.
  • dong quai — an aromatic herb, Angelica sinensis, of the parsley family, native to China and Japan, used to treat menopausal symptoms, premenstrual syndrome, and menstrual irregularity.
  • drainplug — A plug for a drain.
  • dunnaging — baggage or personal effects.
  • dysgeusia — an impairment of the sense of taste.
  • dzungaria — a region in N Sinkiang, China: a Mongol kingdom during the 11th to 14th centuries.
  • educating — Present participle of educate.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?