10-letter words containing n, a, o, g
- road agent — (formerly) a highwayman, especially along stagecoach routes in the western U.S.
- roadmaking — road building
- roborating — strengthening or invigorating
- rockingham — Second Marquis of, Charles Watson-Wentworth.
- ropemaking — the act, skill, or process of fabricating rope.
- rosemaling — decorative work of Norwegian folk origin consisting of painted or carved floral designs, as on furniture or woodwork.
- rough-sawn — (of wood) used as originally cut, without smoothing or sanding: shingles of rough-sawn cedar.
- sagination — the act of fattening livestock
- san angelo — a city in W Texas.
- sandgroper — a nickname for a Western Australian
- sandgrouse — any of several birds of the family Pteroclididae inhabiting sandy areas of the Old World, resembling both pigeons and shorebirds and having precocial young.
- sang-froid — coolness of mind; calmness; composure: They committed the robbery with complete sang-froid.
- sangiovese — a black grape grown in the Tuscany region of Italy, used for making Chianti and other wines
- saprogenic — producing putrefaction or decay, as certain bacteria.
- satanology — the aspect of knowledge that relates to Satan or evil
- scalloping — any of the bivalve mollusks of the genus Argopecten (Pecten) and related genera that swim by rapidly clapping the fluted shell valves together.
- schongauer — Martin [mahr-tn;; German mahr-teen] /ˈmɑr tn;; German ˈmɑr tin/ (Show IPA), c1430–91, German engraver and painter.
- schooligan — a person of school age who engages in acts of public disorder
- sea pigeon — the common black guillemot, Cepphus grylle.
- seignorial — of or relating to a seignior.
- shot angle — the angle from which a shot is taken
- shotmaking — the playing of good shots (by a sports player)
- showcasing — a glass case for the display and protection of articles in shops, museums, etc.
- signal box — a railway signal tower.
- sing along — an informal or unrehearsed singing of songs by a group of people, usually under the direction of a leader; songfest.
- sing-along — an informal or unrehearsed singing of songs by a group of people, usually under the direction of a leader; songfest.
- siphonogam — a plant that is pollinated by siphonogamy
- snapdragon — any plant belonging to the genus Antirrhinum, of the figwort family, especially A. majus, cultivated for its spikes of showy flowers, each having a corolla supposed to resemble the mouth of a dragon.
- snow gauge — an instrument for measuring the depth of snow.
- snow grass — any of various grey-green grasses of the genus Poa, of SE Australian mountain regions
- snowmaking — the creation of artificial snow at ski areas.
- so long as — having considerable linear extent in space: a long distance; a long handle.
- sodcasting — the practice of playing music through the speakers of a mobile phone in a public space
- sognafjord — a fjord in the Norwegian Sea in SW Norway: the longest in Norway. 126 miles (203 km) long and up to 4291 feet (1308 meters) deep.
- sole agent — the only appointed agent or representative
- solivagant — a lone wanderer
- sonography — the medical diagnostic imaging technique used to see internal organs, muscles, etc
- soundstage — a soundproof room or building in which cinematic films are shot
- spatangoid — a type of sea urchin
- sphenogram — a cuneiform character.
- sponge bag — a small, usually waterproof, case for carrying toilet articles.
- spongeable — able to be cleaned with a sponge
- spongecake — sweet cake of eggs and flour
- spongeware — earthenware decorated with color applied with a sponge.
- sporangium — the case or sac in which spores are produced.
- stagnation — the state or condition of stagnating, or having stopped, as by ceasing to run or flow: Meteorologists forecast ozone and air stagnation.
- standing o — standing ovation
- starmonger — an astrologer or fortune-teller
- stationing — a place or position in which a person or thing is normally located.
- steganopod — a bird belonging to the Steganopodes, a group of swimming birds such as pelicans and cormorants