11-letter words containing i, n, g, o, d, r
- dog fancier — a person with a special interest in dogs
- dogtrotting — Present participle of dogtrot.
- dollar sign — the symbol $ before a number indicating that the number represents dollars.
- domineering — inclined to rule arbitrarily or despotically; overbearing; tyrannical: domineering parents.
- double-ring — being or pertaining to a marriage ceremony in which the partners give rings to one another.
- downgrading — Present participle of downgrade.
- downlighter — Downlight.
- downriggers — Plural form of downrigger.
- dowsing rod — Also called dowsing rod [dou-zing] /ˈdaʊ zɪŋ/ (Show IPA). divining rod.
- dowsing-rod — Also called dowsing rod [dou-zing] /ˈdaʊ zɪŋ/ (Show IPA). divining rod.
- dragonflies — Plural form of dragonfly.
- driving dog — (on a lathe) a clamp securing a piece of work and engaging with a slot in a faceplate.
- drop siding — weatherboarding having its upper edges narrowed to fit into grooves or rabbets in its lower edges, and its backs flat against the sheathing or studs of the wall.
- dry-footing — removal of glaze from the rim at the bottom of a piece.
- endeavoring — Present participle of endeavor.
- enshrouding — Present participle of enshroud.
- fairgrounds — Alternative spelling of fairground; the grounds where a fair is held.
- field grown — (of a plant) grown in a field rather than in a pot or other artificial environment
- finger food — food intended to be picked up with the fingers and eaten.
- fingerboard — (of a violin, cello, etc.) the strip of wood on the neck against which the strings are stopped by the fingers.
- fishing rod — a long, slender, cylindrical, flexible rod usually made of bamboo, steel, or fiberglass, for use with a reel and line in catching fish.
- floundering — to struggle with stumbling or plunging movements (usually followed by about, along, on, through, etc.): He saw the child floundering about in the water.
- food grains — the small hard seedlike fruits of a grass, esp a cereal plant, used as a foodstuff
- forcing bid — a bid, often at a higher level than is required, that is understood to oblige the bidder's partner to reply
- forebodings — Plural form of foreboding.
- foredooming — Present participle of foredoom.
- foreign aid — economic, technical, or military aid given by one nation to another for purposes of relief and rehabilitation, for economic stabilization, or for mutual defense.
- freeholding — Property held in freehold.
- freeloading — to take advantage of others for free food, entertainment, etc.
- frigid zone — either of two regions, one between the Arctic Circle and the North Pole, or one between the Antarctic Circle and the South Pole.
- gain ground — profit or advantage.
- gastrodynia — (pathology) gastralgia (stomach pain).
- genocidaire — a person who is guilty of genocide
- gerodontics — the branch of dentistry dealing with aging and aged persons.
- ghirlandaio — (Domenico di Tommaso Curradi di Doffo Bigordi) 1449–94, Italian painter.
- give ground — the quality or state of being resilient; springiness.
- glucuronide — a glycoside that yields glucuronic acid upon hydrolysis.
- god-fearing — deeply respectful or fearful of God.
- godchildren — Plural form of godchild.
- goldbergian — Rube Goldberg.
- golden girl — successful or celebrated woman
- goods train — freight train.
- gooney bird — any of several albatrosses, especially the black-footed albatross and the Laysan albatross, occurring on islands in the Pacific Ocean, often near naval bases.
- gormandized — Simple past tense and past participle of gormandize.
- gormandizer — A person who gormandizes; a glutton or gourmand.
- gormandizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gormandize.
- gourmandise — unrestrained enjoyment of fine foods, wines, and the like.
- gourmandism — a person who is fond of good eating, often indiscriminatingly and to excess.
- gourmandize — to enjoy fine food and drink, especially often and in lavish quantity.
- gradational — any process or change taking place through a series of stages, by degrees, or in a gradual manner.