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7-letter words containing i, l, e, g

  • single- — single- is used to form words which describe something that has one part or feature, rather than having two or more of them.
  • singles — only one in number; one only; unique; sole: a single example.
  • singlet — a sleeveless athletic jersey, especially a loose-fitting top worn by runners, joggers, etc.
  • sleight — skill; dexterity.
  • slesvig — Danish name of Schleswig.
  • slinger — a person or thing that slings.
  • sniggle — to fish for eels by thrusting a baited hook into their lurking places.
  • sniglet — any word coined for something that has no specific name.
  • soilage — an act or instance of soiling.
  • spiegel — a lustrous, crystalline pig iron containing a large amount of manganese, sometimes 15 percent or more, used in making steel.
  • spignel — a European umbelliferous plant, Meum athamanticum, of mountain regions, having white flowers and finely divided aromatic leaves
  • stiegelHenry William, 1729–85, German iron and glass manufacturer in America.
  • swingle — a single person who is highly active socially and sexually; an unmarried person who swings.
  • taglike — resembling a tag
  • tagline — the last line of a play, story, speech, etc., used to clarify or dramatize a point.
  • telling — having force or effect; effective; striking: a telling blow.
  • tigerly — of or like a tiger
  • tillage — the operation, practice, or art of tilling land.
  • tingley — Katherine Augusta Westcott [wes-kuh t] /ˈwɛs kət/ (Show IPA), 1847–1929, U.S. theosophist leader.
  • tringle — a narrow, straight molding, as a fillet.
  • twiglet — a small twig
  • ugliest — very unattractive or unpleasant to look at; offensive to the sense of beauty; displeasing in appearance.
  • unagile — quick and well-coordinated in movement; lithe: an agile leap.
  • veiling — a piece of opaque or transparent material worn over the face for concealment, for protection from the elements, or to enhance the appearance.
  • veliger — a larval stage of certain mollusks, intermediate between the trochophore and the adult form.
  • verilog — (language)   A Hardware Description Language for electronic design and gate level simulation by Cadence Design Systems.
  • villageThe, a city in central Oklahoma.
  • virgule — a short oblique stroke (/) between two words indicating that whichever is appropriate may be chosen to complete the sense of the text in which they occur: The defendant and his/her attorney must appear in court.
  • wealing — Present participle of weal.
  • weigela — any of various shrubby, eastern Asian plants belonging to the genus Weigela, of the honeysuckle family, having funnel-shaped white, pink, or crimson flowers.
  • welding — to unite or fuse (as pieces of metal) by hammering, compressing, or the like, especially after rendering soft or pasty by heat, and sometimes with the addition of fusible material like or unlike the pieces to be united.
  • welling — a hole drilled or bored into the earth to obtain water, petroleum, natural gas, brine, or sulfur.
  • welting — a ridge or wale on the surface of the body, as from a blow of a stick or whip.
  • wergild — (in Anglo-Saxon England and other Germanic countries)
  • wiggled — Simple past tense and past participle of wiggle.
  • wiggler — a person or thing that wiggles.
  • wiggles — Plural form of wiggle.
  • wiglets — Plural form of wiglet.
  • winglet — a little wing.
  • wriggle — to twist to and fro; writhe; squirm.
  • wrigleyWilliam, Jr. 1861–1932, U.S. chewing-gum manufacturer and baseball team owner.
  • yealing — a person of the same age as oneself.
  • yelling — Present participle of yell.
  • yelping — Present participle of yelp.
  • zieglerKarl [kahrl;; German kahrl] /kɑrl;; German kɑrl/ (Show IPA), 1897–1973, German chemist: Nobel prize 1963.
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