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

  • gelatin — a nearly transparent, faintly yellow, odorless, and almost tasteless glutinous substance obtained by boiling in water the ligaments, bones, skin, etc., of animals, and forming the basis of jellies, glues, and the like.
  • gelding — a castrated male animal, especially a horse.
  • gelling — Physical Chemistry. a semirigid colloidal dispersion of a solid with a liquid or gas, as jelly, glue, etc.
  • geminal — Denoting substituent atoms or groups, especially protons, attached to the same atom in a molecule.
  • genital — of, relating to, or noting reproduction.
  • gentile — of or relating to any people not Jewish.
  • ghrelin — An enzyme produced by stomach lining cells that stimulates appetite.
  • gillnet — to catch (a fish) with a gill net.
  • gingles — Plural form of gingle.
  • ginnels — Plural form of ginnel.
  • gleeing — to squint or look with one eye.
  • gleenie — a guinea fowl
  • glennie — Dame Evelyn (Elizabeth Ann). born 1965, Scottish percussionist and composer; profoundly deaf since the age of twelve
  • glenoid — shallow or slightly cupped, as the articular cavities of the scapula and the temporal bone.
  • gliddenCharles Jasper, 1857–1927, U.S. businessman: a pioneer in the telephone industry.
  • glinted — a tiny, quick flash of light.
  • glisten — to reflect a sparkling light or a faint intermittent glow; shine lustrously.
  • glueing — Present participle of glue; obsolete spelling of gluing.
  • glycine — a colorless, crystalline, sweet, water-soluble solid, H 2 NCH 2 COOH, the simplest amino acid: used chiefly in organic synthesis and biochemical research. Symbol: G. Abbreviation: Gly;
  • gmelina — a deciduous tree, Gmelina arborea, native to Southeast Asia,whose timber is important in the tropics.
  • gobelin — made at the tapestry factory established in Paris in the 15th century by the Gobelins, a French family of dyers and weavers.
  • goneril — (in Shakespeare's King Lear) the elder of Lear's two faithless daughters.
  • gremlin — a mischievous invisible being, said by airplane pilots in World War II to cause engine trouble and mechanical difficulties.
  • grindle — bowfin.
  • guillen — Jorge [hawr-he] /ˈhɔr hɛ/ (Show IPA), 1893–1984, Spanish poet, in the U.S. 1940–75.
  • gumline — the line where gums meet the teeth
  • healing — curing or curative; prescribed or helping to heal.
  • heeling — a heeling movement; a cant.
  • heiling — Present participle of heil.
  • 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.
  • herling — (UK, dialect) The young of the sea trout.
  • hindleg — Alternative spelling of hind leg.
  • ignoble — of low character, aims, etc.; mean; base: his ignoble purposes.
  • 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.
  • inglobe — to enclose as in a globe; encompass; fix within a sphere
  • inlarge — Archaic spelling of enlarge.
  • jelling — to congeal; become jellylike in consistency.
  • jelqing — The use of the jelq technique for penis enlargement.
  • jingled — Simple past tense and past participle of jingle.
  • jingler — One who, or that which, jingles.
  • jingles — Plural form of jingle.
  • jinglet — the clapper of a sleigh-bell
  • keeling — Present participle of keel.
  • kegling — the sport of bowling.
  • kelping — any large, brown, cold-water seaweed of the family Laminariaceae, used as food and in various manufacturing processes.
  • kinglet — a king ruling over a small country or territory.
  • kringle — A Scandinavian pastry, a Nordic variety of pretzel.
  • langiel — an Aboriginal war club or bludgeon.
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