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

  • haveing — (archaic) present participle of have.
  • heading — the upper part of the body in humans, joined to the trunk by the neck, containing the brain, eyes, ears, nose, and mouth.
  • healing — curing or curative; prescribed or helping to heal.
  • heaping — a group of things placed, thrown, or lying one on another; pile: a heap of stones.
  • hearing — the faculty or sense by which sound is perceived.
  • heating — the state of a body perceived as having or generating a relatively high degree of warmth.
  • heaving — to raise or lift with effort or force; hoist: to heave a heavy ax.
  • hedging — a row of bushes or small trees planted close together, especially when forming a fence or boundary; hedgerow: small fields separated by hedges.
  • heeding — to give careful attention to: He did not heed the warning.
  • heeling — a heeling movement; a cant.
  • hefting — weight; heaviness: It was a rather flimsy chair, without much heft to it.
  • heiling — Present participle of heil.
  • heiring — a person who inherits or has a right of inheritance in the property of another following the latter's death.
  • hejiang — a former province in Manchuria, in NE China.
  • helming — Also, heaume. Also called great helm. a medieval helmet, typically formed as a single cylindrical piece with a flat or raised top, completely enclosing the head.
  • helping — the act of helping; aid or assistance; relief or succor.
  • hemming — to fold back and sew down the edge of (cloth, a garment, etc.); form an edge or border on or around.
  • hending — Present participle of hend.
  • hengist — died a.d. 488? chief of the Jutes: with his brother Horsa led the Teutonic invasion of southern Britain c440.
  • henning — Present participle of hen.
  • henting — Present participle of hent.
  • herding — a herdsman (usually used in combination): a cowherd; a goatherd; a shepherd.
  • herling — (UK, dialect) The young of the sea trout.
  • herring — an important food fish, Clupea harengus harengus, found in enormous shoals in the North Atlantic.
  • hindleg — Alternative spelling of hind leg.
  • hygenic — Misspelling of hygienic.
  • hygiene — Also, hygienics. the science that deals with the preservation of health.
  • igneous — Geology. produced under conditions involving intense heat, as rocks of volcanic origin or rocks crystallized from molten magma.
  • ignited — to set on fire; kindle.
  • igniter — a person or thing that ignites.
  • ignites — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ignite.
  • ignoble — of low character, aims, etc.; mean; base: his ignoble purposes.
  • ignored — to refrain from noticing or recognizing: to ignore insulting remarks.
  • ignorer — One who ignores.
  • ignores — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ignore.
  • igraine — the mother of King Arthur.
  • imagine — to form a mental image of (something not actually present to the senses).
  • imogene — a female given name.
  • impinge — to make an impression; have an effect or impact (usually followed by on or upon): to impinge upon the imagination; social pressures that impinge upon one's daily life.
  • impregn — to impregnate; make fruitful or full
  • in gear — vehicle: engaged
  • inbeing — The fact or state of being in; existence in something else.
  • incaged — encage.
  • indigen — An indigene or native.
  • indulge — to yield to an inclination or desire; allow oneself to follow one's will (often followed by in): Dessert came, but I didn't indulge. They indulged in unbelievable shopping sprees.
  • ingelowJean, 1820–97, English poet and novelist.
  • ingemar — a male given name.
  • ingenue — the part of an artless, innocent, unworldly girl or young woman, especially as represented on the stage.
  • ingenui — (legal) In civil law, a class of freemen who were born free. They were distinguished from the class known as liberti or libertini who, born slaves, had afterwards legally obtained their freedom.
  • ingesta — Material introduced into the body by the stomach or alimentary canal.
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