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10-letter words containing n, a, o, g

  • long march — the 6000-mile (9654-km) retreat of the Chinese Communist Party and Red Army from southeastern China (Jiangxi province) to the northwest (Yanan in Shaanxi province) in 1934–35, during which Mao Zedong became leader of the Communist party.
  • long-chain — pertaining to molecules composed of long chains of atoms, or polymers composed of long chains of monomers.
  • long-coats — dress-like garments formerly worn by a baby
  • long-dated — (of a gilt-edged security) having more than 15 years to run before redemption
  • long-eared — (of an animal) having long ears
  • long-faced — having an unhappy or gloomy expression; glum.
  • long-range — considering or extending into the future: a long-range outlook; long-range plans.
  • longaevous — long-lived
  • longbeards — Plural form of longbeard.
  • longbowman — an archer who uses a longbow.
  • longhaired — Having long hair.
  • longheaded — Having unusual foresight or sagacity.
  • longmeadow — a town in S Massachusetts.
  • longs peak — a peak in N Colorado, in the Rocky Mountain National Park. 14,255 feet (4345 meters).
  • longtailed — Having a long tail (used in the names of various birds and animals).
  • lossmaking — a business that consistently operates at a loss.
  • lounge bar — more elegant bar
  • lounge car — club car.
  • loungewear — articles of clothing suitable for wear during leisure time, especially in the home.
  • lovemaking — the act of courting or wooing.
  • low german — the West Germanic languages not included in the High German group, as English, Dutch, Flemish, or Plattdeutsch. Abbreviation: LG. Compare High German (def 1).
  • lowballing — the practice of offering a customer a deceptively low price
  • lunchwagon — a small bus, truck, or other vehicle outfitted for selling or for serving light meals and snacks to the public.
  • mabinogion — a collection of medieval Welsh romances that were translated (1838–49) by Lady Charlotte Guest.
  • macdonoughThomas, 1783–1825, U.S. naval officer: defeated British on Lake Champlain 1814.
  • magindanao — a member of a Moro people of Mindanao in the Philippines.
  • magnetrons — Plural form of magnetron.
  • mahoganies — Plural form of mahogany.
  • making out — to bring into existence by shaping or changing material, combining parts, etc.: to make a dress; to make a channel; to make a work of art.
  • mammogenic — exciting or generating mammary development
  • man of god — a clergyman.
  • mandragora — mandrake (def 1).
  • mangetouts — Plural form of mangetout.
  • mangosteen — the juicy, edible fruit of an East Indian tree, Garcinia mangostana.
  • mao zedong — 1893–1976, Chinese Communist leader: chairman of the People's Republic of China 1949–59; chairman of the Chinese Communist Party 1943–76.
  • māoritanga — the Māori culture; Māori way of life
  • maringouin — a mosquito, especially a large swamp mosquito.
  • maskalonge — muskellunge.
  • maskinonge — muskellunge.
  • mcgonagall — William. 1830–?1902, Scottish writer of doggerel, noted for its bathos, repetitive rhymes, poor scansion, and ludicrous effect
  • mcnaughton — Andrew George Latta [lat-uh] /ˈlæt ə/ (Show IPA), 1887–1966, Canadian army officer, statesman, diplomat, and scientist.
  • meat wagon — an ambulance.
  • megadontia — macrodontia.
  • meganewton — a unit of force equal to one million newtons
  • megaphoned — Simple past tense and past participle of megaphone.
  • megaphones — Plural form of megaphone.
  • megaphonic — Of, or pertaining to, a megaphone.
  • meningioma — a hard, encapsulated tumor that grows slowly along the meninges.
  • metagenome — (genetics) all the genetic material present in an environmental sample, consisting of the genomes of many individual organisms.
  • methanogen — any of a diverse group of widely distributed archaebacteria that occur in anaerobic environments, as the intestinal tracts of animals, freshwater and marine sediments, and sewage, and are capable of producing methane from a limited number of substrates, including carbon dioxide and hydrogen, acetate, and methylamines: an important source of natural gas.
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