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9-letter words containing n, e, i, g

  • in league — If you say that someone is in league with another person to do something bad, you mean that they are working together to do that thing.
  • incensing — Present participle of incense.
  • incenting — to give incentives to: The government should incentivize the private sector to create jobs.
  • incepting — to take in; ingest.
  • incourage — Archaic form of encourage.
  • indearing — Present participle of indear.
  • indenting — Present participle of indent.
  • indigence — seriously impoverished condition; poverty.
  • indigency — Indigence.
  • indigenes — Plural form of indigene.
  • indigents — Plural form of indigent.
  • indulgent — characterized by or showing indulgence; benignly lenient or permissive: an indulgent parent.
  • inelegant — not elegant; lacking in refinement, gracefulness, or good taste.
  • inergetic — (archaic) Having no energy; sluggish.
  • inert gas — noble gas.
  • infecting — Present participle of infect.
  • inferring — to derive by reasoning; conclude or judge from premises or evidence: They inferred his displeasure from his cool tone of voice.
  • infesting — Present participle of infest.
  • infighter — A person who indulges in infighting.
  • infringed — to commit a breach or infraction of; violate or transgress: to infringe a copyright; to infringe a rule.
  • infringer — to commit a breach or infraction of; violate or transgress: to infringe a copyright; to infringe a rule.
  • infringes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of infringe.
  • ingathers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ingather.
  • ingenious — characterized by cleverness or originality of invention or construction: an ingenious machine.
  • ingenuine — False, not genuine or authentic.
  • ingenuity — the quality of being cleverly inventive or resourceful; inventiveness: a designer of great ingenuity.
  • ingenuous — free from reserve, restraint, or dissimulation; candid; sincere.
  • ingerland — a jocular spelling of England, as pronounced in the chants of sports, esp football, supporters
  • ingersollRobert Green, 1833–99, U.S. lawyer, political leader, and orator.
  • ingestant — something that is ingested, especially a substance that may be associated with an allergic reaction.
  • ingesting — Present participle of ingest.
  • ingestion — to take, as food, into the body (opposed to egest).
  • ingestive — to take, as food, into the body (opposed to egest).
  • inglenook — a corner or nook near a fireplace; chimney corner.
  • ingleside — a fireside.
  • inglewood — a city in SW California, near Los Angeles.
  • ingluvies — a dilation or pouch in the oesophagus of certain animals that receives food prior to the main stomach, esp a bird's craw, or the first stomach of a cow or other ruminating animal
  • ingrafted — engraft.
  • ingrained — ingrained; firmly fixed.
  • ingrainer — a person who ingrains
  • ingressed — Simple past tense and past participle of ingress.
  • ingresses — Plural form of ingress.
  • ingrossed — Simple past tense and past participle of ingross.
  • ingveonic — of or relating to Old English, Old Frisian, and Old Saxon, taken collectively.
  • injecting — Present participle of inject.
  • inlighted — Lit up or lighted; illuminated.
  • inlighten — Alternative spelling of enlighten.
  • inmeshing — Present participle of inmesh.
  • inmigrate — to move or settle into a different part of one's country or home territory.
  • innerving — Present participle of innerve.
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