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6-letter words containing l, g

  • chagul — a bag made of goatskin: used in India for carrying water.
  • cigale — (language, tool)   A parser generator language with extensible syntax.
  • claggy — stickily clinging, as mud
  • clangs — Plural form of clang.
  • clangy — Having a clanging sound.
  • cledge — (mining) The upper stratum of fuller's earth.
  • clergy — The clergy are the official leaders of the religious activities of a particular group of believers.
  • clings — Plural form of cling.
  • clingy — If you describe someone as clingy, you mean that they become very attached to people and depend on them too much.
  • cloggy — thick and sticky; causing clogging
  • clough — a gorge or narrow ravine
  • cludge — (slang, UK dialectal) A toilet.
  • cluing — anything that serves to guide or direct in the solution of a problem, mystery, etc.
  • clunge — (UK, vulgar, slang, mostly, internet) vagina.
  • coggle — to wobble or rock; be unsteady
  • colugo — flying lemur
  • cudgel — A cudgel is a thick, short stick that is used as a weapon.
  • daggle — to soil by trailing through water or mud
  • dangle — If something dangles from somewhere or if you dangle it somewhere, it hangs or swings loosely.
  • dangly — dangling; hanging down
  • dargle — a wooded hollow
  • deluge — A deluge of things is a large number of them which arrive or happen at the same time.
  • dialog — dialogue
  • diglot — bilingual.
  • dilogy — Ambiguous or equivocal speech or discourse.
  • dingle — a deep, narrow cleft between hills; shady dell.
  • dogleg — a route, way, or course that turns at a sharp angle.
  • doling — a portion or allotment of money, food, etc., especially as given at regular intervals by a charity or for maintenance.
  • dongle — a hardware device attached to a computer without which a particular software program will not run: used to prevent unauthorized use.
  • eagled — Simple past tense and past participle of eagle.
  • eagles — Plural form of eagle.
  • eaglet — a young eagle.
  • ealing — a borough of Greater London, England.
  • edgily — nervously irritable; impatient and anxious.
  • eeling — Present participle of eel.
  • egally — equally
  • eggler — (archaic) One who gathers, or deals in, eggs.
  • elazig — city in EC Turkey: pop. 218,000
  • elbing — a port in N Poland: metallurgical industries. Pop: 129 000 (2005 est)
  • elbląg — a port in N Poland: metallurgical industries. Pop: 129 000 (2005 est)
  • elegit — (archaic) A judicial writ ordering seizure of a debtor's property.
  • eloign — (obsolete, transitive) To remove (something) to a distance.
  • emulge — to drain liquid from
  • engaol — (transitive, British, archaic) To imprison in a gaol.
  • engels — Friedrich (ˈfriːdrɪç). 1820–95, German socialist leader and political philosopher, in England from 1849. He collaborated with Marx on The Communist Manifesto (1848) and his own works include Condition of the Working Classes in England (1844) and The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State (1884)
  • engild — (transitive) To gild; to make splendid.
  • englut — To swallow; to swallow up, engulf.
  • engulf — (of a natural force ) sweep over (something) so as to surround or cover it completely.
  • epilog — Alternative spelling of epilogue.
  • erlang — (communication) A dimensionless statistical measure of the volume of telecommunications traffic relative to the capacity of a single channel.
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