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9-letter words containing l, g, u

  • bull gear — any large driving gear among smaller gears.
  • bull-ring — an arena for a bullfight.
  • bulleting — a small metal projectile, part of a cartridge, for firing from small arms.
  • bullfight — A bullfight is a public entertainment in which people fight and kill bulls. Bullfights take place in Spain, Portugal, and Latin America.
  • bumpology — phrenology
  • bung-hole — a hole in a cask through which it is filled.
  • bungaloid — resembling a bungalow or bungalows or characterized by bungalows or structures resembling bungalows
  • butlerage — a butler's position or rank
  • buzzingly — in a buzzing manner
  • cagoulard — a member of a secret French organization, active 1932–40, that conspired to overthrow the Third Republic.
  • calabogus — a mixed drink containing rum, spruce beer, and molasses
  • 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.
  • catalogue — A catalogue is a list of things such as the goods you can buy from a particular company, the objects in a museum, or the books in a library.
  • 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
  • changeful — often changing; inconstant; variable
  • chargeful — onerous; expensive
  • chuckling — Present participle of chuckle.
  • cingulate — Anatomy, Zoology. a belt, zone, or girdlelike part.
  • clangours — Plural form of clangour.
  • clutching — to hatch (chickens).
  • coagulant — a substance that aids or produces coagulation
  • coagulase — any enzyme that causes coagulation of blood
  • coagulate — When a liquid coagulates, it becomes very thick.
  • colleague — Your colleagues are the people you work with, especially in a professional job.
  • collegium — (in the former Soviet Union) a board in charge of a department
  • collogues — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of collogue.
  • colluding — to act together through a secret understanding, especially with evil or harmful intent.
  • colouring — The colouring of something is the colour or colours that it is.
  • conjugial — A form of \"conjugal\" used by Swedenborg and his followers, used to distinguish their ideas about marital relations.
  • consulage — a duty paid by merchants for a consul's protection of their goods while abroad
  • couplings — Plural form of coupling.
  • courtling — a fawning or sycophantic member of a royal court
  • crumbling — to break into small fragments or crumbs.
  • crumpling — Present participle of crumple.
  • cuddlings — Plural form of cuddling.
  • cudgeling — a short, thick stick used as a weapon; club.
  • cudgelled — a short, thick stick used as a weapon; club.
  • cultigens — Plural form of cultigen.
  • culturgen — One of the propagating mutating cultural units that form the subject of memetics.
  • culturing — the quality in a person or society that arises from a concern for what is regarded as excellent in arts, letters, manners, scholarly pursuits, etc.
  • cunningly — skill employed in a shrewd or sly manner, as in deceiving; craftiness; guile.
  • curtilage — the enclosed area of land adjacent to a dwelling house
  • cut along — to hurry off
  • cut glass — Cut glass is glass that has patterns cut into its surface.
  • cuttingly — In a cutting manner.
  • d-glucose — a sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , having several optically different forms, the common dextrorotatory form (dextroglucose, or -glucose) occurring in many fruits, animal tissues and fluids, etc., and having a sweetness about one half that of ordinary sugar, and the rare levorotatory form (levoglucose, or -glucose) not naturally occurring.
  • daubingly — in a coating or smearing manner
  • de gaulle — Charles (André Joseph Marie) (ʃarl). 1890–1970, French general and statesman. During World War II, he refused to accept Pétain's armistice with Germany and founded the Free French movement in England (1940). He was head of the provisional governments (1944–46) and, as first president of the Fifth Republic (1959–69), he restored political and economic stability to France
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