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7-letter words containing o, g, a, m

  • gourami — a large, air-breathing, nest-building, freshwater Asiatic fish, Osphronemus goramy, used for food.
  • gownman — Archaic form of gownsman.
  • gramont — Philibert [fee-lee-ber] /fi liˈbɛr/ (Show IPA), Comte de, 1621–1707, French courtier, soldier, and adventurer.
  • grannom — a widespread caddis fly, Brachycentrus subnubilus, the larvae of which attach their cases to vegetation under running water and are esteemed as a bait by anglers
  • grogram — a coarse fabric of silk, of silk and mohair or wool, or of wool, formerly in use.
  • hogmane — a horse's mane that has been cut short so that it stands up stiffly
  • homaged — Simple past tense and past participle of homage.
  • homager — a vassal.
  • homages — Plural form of homage.
  • hommage — A homage, especially something in an artwork which has been done in respectful imitation of another artist.
  • hygroma — a swelling in the soft tissue that occurs over a joint, usually caused by repeated injury
  • isogamy — the fusion of two gametes of similar form, as in certain algae.
  • isogram — a line representing equality with respect to a given variable, used to relate points on maps, charts, etc.
  • kampong — a small village or community of houses in Malay-speaking lands.
  • loaming — a rich, friable soil containing a relatively equal mixture of sand and silt and a somewhat smaller proportion of clay.
  • log jam — an immovable pileup or tangle of logs, as in a river, causing a blockage.
  • logjams — Plural form of logjam.
  • lumbago — pain in the lower, or lumbar, region of the back or loins, especially chronic or recurring pain.
  • mad-dog — Slang. to glare at threateningly.
  • magalog — A promotional catalog or sales brochure designed to resemble a high-quality magazine.
  • maggots — Plural form of maggot.
  • maggoty — infested with maggots, as food.
  • maginot — André, 1877–1932, French minister of war 1929–32: backed construction of Maginot Line.
  • magneto — a small electric generator with an armature that rotates in a magnetic field provided by permanent magnets, as a generator supplying ignition current for certain types of internal combustion engines or a hand-operated generator for telephone signaling.
  • mahjong — a game of Chinese origin usually played by four persons with 144 dominolike pieces or tiles marked in suits, counters, and dice, the object being to build a winning combination of pieces.
  • mangeao — a small tree with glossy leaves, Litsae calicaris, of New Zealand's North Island
  • mangoes — Plural form of mango.
  • mangoky — a river in S central Madagascar, flowing W and then N to the Mozambique Channel. About 350 miles (565 km) long.
  • mangold — Mangelwurzel.
  • marengo — a village in Piedmont, in NW Italy: Napoleon defeated the Austrians 1800.
  • margosa — neem (def 2).
  • megafog — an amplified fog signal produced by the simultaneous sounding of multiple megaphones, each pointing in a different direction
  • megalo- — indicating greatness, or abnormal size
  • megaohm — One million ( 106 ) ohms, abbreviated as M\u03a9.
  • megapod — Megapode.
  • megaron — a building or semi-independent unit of a building, generally used as a living apartment and typically having a square or broadly rectangular principal chamber with a porch, often of columns in antis, and sometimes an antichamber or other small compartments.
  • megaton — one million tons.
  • milagro — A traditional religious folk charm of Latin America and nearby regions, coming in a variety of forms.
  • moaning — a prolonged, low, inarticulate sound uttered from or as if from physical or mental suffering.
  • mogadon — a drug of the benzodiazepine group, a brand of nitrazepam, used to treat insomnia
  • mogador — former name of Essaouira.
  • mohegan — a member of a group of Pequot Indians that broke with the Pequot and then fought against them in the Pequot War.
  • montage — the technique of combining in a single composition pictorial elements from various sources, as parts of different photographs or fragments of printing, either to give the illusion that the elements belonged together originally or to allow each element to retain its separate identity as a means of adding interest or meaning to the composition. Compare collage (def 1).
  • montaguAshley (Montague Francis Ashley Montagu) 1905–1999, U.S. anthropologist and writer, born in England.
  • moorage — a place for mooring.
  • morgans — Plural form of morgan.
  • moringa — Any of several trees, of genus Moringa, that grow in tropical and subtropical India and Africa.
  • mortage — Misspelling of mortgage.
  • motagua — a river in S central Guatemala, flowing NE to the Caribbean Sea. About 250 miles (315 km) long.
  • moulage — the making of a mold, especially with plaster of Paris, of objects, footprints, tire tracks, etc., as for the purpose of identification.
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