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6-letter words containing l, o, n, g

  • agonal — relating to agony, esp before death
  • analog — Analog technology involves measuring, storing, or recording an infinitely variable amount of information by using physical quantities such as voltage.
  • angelo — a male given name.
  • anglo- — Anglo- combines with adjectives indicating nationality to form adjectives which describe something connected with relations between Britain and another country.
  • anglos — Plural form of anglo.
  • angola — a republic in SW Africa, on the Atlantic: includes the enclave of Cabinda, north of the River Congo; a Portuguese possession from 1575 until its independence in 1975; multiparty constitution adopted in 1991; factional violence. It consists of a narrow coastal plain with a large fertile plateau in the east. Currency: kwanza. Religion: Christian majority. Capital: Luanda. Pop: 18 565 269 (2013 est). Area: 1 246 693 sq km (481 351 sq miles)
  • belong — If something belongs to you, you own it.
  • calgon — a chemical compound, sodium hexametaphosphate, with water-softening properties, used in detergents
  • 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.
  • eloign — (obsolete, transitive) To remove (something) to a distance.
  • engaol — (transitive, British, archaic) To imprison in a gaol.
  • flagon — a large bottle for wine, liquors, etc.
  • flongs — Plural form of flong.
  • funlog — Functional programming plus unification. "Lazy" in the sense that expressions are reduced only if they are not unifiable.
  • galion — a city in N central Ohio.
  • gallon — a common unit of capacity in English-speaking countries, equal to four quarts, the U.S. standard gallon being equal to 231 cubic inches (3.7853 liters), and the British imperial gallon to 277.42 cubic inches (4.546 liters). Abbreviation: gal.
  • galtonSir Francis, 1822–1911, English scientist and writer.
  • gilson — Étienne Henry [ey-tyen ahn-ree] /eɪˈtyɛn ɑ̃ˈri/ (Show IPA), 1884–1978, French historian.
  • globin — the protein component of hemoglobin, made up of alpha and beta chains.
  • gluino — (physics) The superpartner of the gluon.
  • gluons — Plural form of gluon.
  • goblin — a grotesque sprite or elf that is mischievous or malicious toward people.
  • golden — bright, metallic, or lustrous like gold; of the color of gold; yellow: golden hair.
  • goldin — (UK, dialect) The golding, or corn marigold.
  • gollan — a yellow flower
  • holing — Present participle of hole.
  • jilong — Chilung.
  • kalong — a large flying fox of Southeast Asia.
  • lagoon — an area of shallow water separated from the sea by low sandy dunes. Compare laguna.
  • lanugo — a coat of delicate, downy hairs, especially that with which the human fetus or a newborn infant is covered.
  • legion — a division of the Roman army, usually comprising 3000 to 6000 soldiers.
  • legong — an elegant Balinese dance-pantomime performed by several girls in elaborate costumes.
  • lingoe — a metal weight attached to the cords of a Jacquard harness, for lowering the warp threads after they have been raised and for keeping the harness cords taut.
  • lingol — LINguistics Oriented Language. Natural language processing.
  • lingos — Plural form of lingo.
  • lingot — A linget or ingot.
  • lobing — the formation of and division into lobes
  • log in — the act of logging in to a database, mobile device, or computer, especially a multiuser computer or a remote or networked computer system.
  • logans — Plural form of logan.
  • logins — Plural form of login.
  • logion — a traditional saying or maxim, as of a religious teacher.
  • loglan — (human language)   An artificial human language designed by James Cooke Brown in the late 1950s. Most artificial human languages devised in the 19th and 20th centuries (e.g. Esperanto) were designed to be easy to learn. Loglan, however, is unique in that its chief design goal was to avoid synactic ambiguity -- the kind that arises when trying to parse sentences like "The blind man picked up the hammer and saw". Loglan is thus the only human language unambiguously parseable by a formal grammar (assuming you count Loglan as a human language; its grammar is not at all like that of any natural human language). Most later development on Loglan continued under the name "Lojban". The Loglan Institute, Inc. is a non-profit research corporation. Loglan is unrelated to the programming languages Loglan'82 or Loglan-88. E-mail: [email protected] Telephone: +1 (619) 270 1691. Address: The Loglan Institute, Inc., 3009 Peters Way, San Diego, CA, 92117-4313 U.S.A.
  • logons — Plural form of logon.
  • long s — a lower-case s, printed ʃ, formerly used in handwriting and printing
  • longan — the small, one-seeded, greenish-brown fruit of a large evergreen tree, Euphoria longana, of the soapberry family, native to China and allied to the litchi.
  • longed — a long rope used to guide a horse during training or exercise.
  • longer — having considerable linear extent in space: a long distance; a long handle.
  • longes — Plural form of longe.
  • longi- — long

On this page, we collect all 6-letter words with L-O-N-G. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 6-letter word that contains in L-O-N-G to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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