7-letter words containing o, g, l, e
- goalies — Plural form of goalie.
- gobbled — Simple past tense and past participle of gobble.
- gobbler — a person or thing that gobbles or consumes voraciously or quickly: a gobbler of science fiction.
- gobbles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gobble.
- gobelin — made at the tapestry factory established in Paris in the 15th century by the Gobelins, a French family of dyers and weavers.
- goblets — Plural form of goblet.
- godless — having or acknowledging no god or deity; atheistic.
- godlier — Comparative form of godly.
- godlike — like or befitting God or a god; divine.
- goggled — Simple past tense and past participle of goggle.
- goggler — a person who stares goggle-eyed.
- goggles — goggles. large spectacles equipped with special lenses, protective rims, etc., to prevent injury to the eyes from strong wind, flying objects, blinding light, etc. spectacles designed for a special purpose, as night-vision or stereoscopic goggles. Informal. glasses, or eyeglasses: I can't see a thing without my goggles. Synonyms: specs, shades.
- goldest — a precious yellow metallic element, highly malleable and ductile, and not subject to oxidation or corrosion. Symbol: Au; atomic weight: 196.967; atomic number: 79; specific gravity: 19.3 at 20°C.
- goldeye — a silvery, herringlike game fish, Hiodon alosoides, found in the fresh waters of central North America.
- golfers — Plural form of golfer.
- gomeral — a fool.
- gomerel — a fool.
- gomeril — a fool.
- goneril — (in Shakespeare's King Lear) the elder of Lear's two faithless daughters.
- googled — Simple past tense and past participle of google.
- googles — Plural form of google.
- goolies — (slang, British) The testicles.
- gormley — Sir Antony. born 1950, British sculptor, noted for Angel of the North (1998) and Another Place (1997), an installation of cast-iron figures facing out to sea on Crosby beach, near Liverpool
- gospels — the teachings of Jesus and the apostles; the Christian revelation.
- goulden — Obsolete form of golden.
- grockle — (slang, British, various parts of the South West) A tourist from elsewhere in the country.
- grolier — pertaining to a decorative design (Grolier design) in bookbinding, consisting of bands interlaced in geometric forms.
- grovels — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of grovel.
- growled — to utter a deep guttural sound of anger or hostility: The dog growled at the mail carrier.
- growler — a person or thing that growls.
- halogen — any of the electronegative elements, fluorine, chlorine, iodine, bromine, and astatine, that form binary salts by direct union with metals.
- hengelo — a city in the E Netherlands.
- hoglets — Plural form of hoglet.
- hoglike — Resembling a hog or some aspect of one; piglike.
- holberg — Ludvig, Baron. 1684–1754, Danish playwright, poet, and historian, born in Norway: considered the founder of modern Danish literature
- ignoble — of low character, aims, etc.; mean; base: his ignoble purposes.
- ingelow — Jean, 1820–97, English poet and novelist.
- inglobe — to enclose as in a globe; encompass; fix within a sphere
- jagello — a member of a dynasty ruling in Bohemia, Hungary, Lithuania, and Poland in the 14th to 16th centuries.
- joggled — Simple past tense and past participle of joggle.
- joggler — One who takes part in the sport of joggling (a combination of jogging and juggling).
- joggles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of joggle.
- kellogg — Frank Billings, 1856–1937, U.S. statesman: secretary of state 1925–29; Nobel Peace Prize 1929.
- kilgore — a city in NE Texas.
- langreo — a city in N Spain.
- legator — a person who bequeaths; a testator.
- leggero — (music) Lightly, delicately, or gently.
- leghold — (attributive) Describing a kind of trap that catches an animal by the leg.
- leghorn — English name of Livorno.
- legions — Plural form of legion.