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10-letter words containing l, g, e

  • blue flags — any North American plant of the genus Iris, especially I. versicolor : the state flower of Tennessee.
  • blue giant — any of the large, bright stars having surface temperatures of about 20,000 K and diameters that are often ten times that of the sun.
  • blue goose — a variety of the snow goose that has a bluish-grey body and white head and neck
  • blue grama — any grass of the genus Bouteloua, of South America and western North America, as B. gracilis (blue grama)
  • blue ridge — a mountain range extending SW from N Virginia to N Georgia: part of the Appalachian Mountains.
  • blue-green — a color about midway between blue and green in the spectrum.
  • bluetongue — an Australian lizard, Tiliqua scincoides, having a cobalt-blue tongue
  • blundering — a gross, stupid, or careless mistake: That's your second blunder this morning.
  • bog myrtle — sweet gale.
  • bog turtle — a small turtle, Clemmys muhlenbergi, inhabiting swamps and slow, muddy-bottomed streams in scattered areas from New York to North Carolina.
  • bogey hole — a natural pool used for swimming
  • bogey-hole — a swimming hole.
  • boiled egg — an egg cooked in its shell in boiling water
  • bolstering — a long, often cylindrical, cushion or pillow for a bed, sofa, etc.
  • boondoggle — People sometimes refer to an official organization or activity as a boondoggle when they think it wastes a lot of time and money and does not achieve much.
  • bootlegged — made, sold, or transported unlawfully.
  • bootlegger — alcoholic liquor unlawfully made, sold, or transported, without registration or payment of taxes.
  • bouldering — rock climbing on large boulders or small outcrops either as practice or as a sport in its own right
  • bow-legged — outward curvature of the legs causing a separation of the knees when the ankles are close or in contact.
  • bowldering — pavement made with small boulders.
  • bridgeable — a structure spanning and providing passage over a river, chasm, road, or the like.
  • bridgetalk — (language)   A visual language.
  • bridgewall — (in a furnace or boiler) a transverse baffle that serves to deflect products of combustion.
  • brightline — (of rules, standards, etc.) unambiguously clear: This muddies the waters of what should be a brightline rule.
  • brinelling — a localized surface corrosion; a cause of damage to bearings
  • bubble gum — Bubble gum is a sweet substance similar to chewing gum. You can blow it out of your mouth so it makes the shape of a bubble.
  • bubble-gum — a type of chewing gum that can be blown into large bubbles through the lips.
  • bugger all — Bugger all is a rude way of saying 'nothing'.
  • bugger-all — absolutely nothing; nothing at all: Those reckless investments left him with bugger-all.
  • buildering — the practice of climbing tall urban buildings, for sport or publicity.
  • bulk large — to be or seem important or prominent
  • bulldogged — one of an English breed of medium-sized, short-haired, muscular dogs with prominent, undershot jaws, usually having a white and tan or brindled coat, raised originally for bullbaiting.
  • bulldogger — a person who brings an animal, esp a steer, to the ground by twisting its head from the horns
  • bunglesome — characterized by bungling
  • burgenland — a state of E Austria. Capital: Eisenstadt. Pop: 276 419 (2003 est). Area: 3965 sq km (1531 sq miles)
  • burglarize — If a building is burglarized, a thief enters it by force and steals things.
  • burlingameAnson [an-suh n] /ˈæn sən/ (Show IPA), 1820–70, U.S. diplomat.
  • bushelling — alteration of clothes
  • cablegrams — Plural form of cablegram.
  • calcifuges — Plural form of calcifuge.
  • camerlengo — a cardinal who acts as the pope's financial secretary and the papal treasurer
  • camouflage — Camouflage consists of things such as leaves, branches, or brown and green paint, which are used to make it difficult for an enemy to see military forces and equipment.
  • cancelling — to make void; revoke; annul: to cancel a reservation.
  • carmagnole — a dance and song popular during the French Revolution
  • cartilages — Plural form of cartilage.
  • case glass — glass composed of two or more layers of glass in different colors, often having the top layer cut or ground away so that the lower layer can serve as background or contrast.
  • catalogers — Plural form of cataloger.
  • catalogize — to make a list of or catalogue
  • catalogued — a list or record, as of items for sale or courses at a university, systematically arranged and often including descriptive material: a stamp catalog.
  • cataloguer — One who catalogues.
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