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8-letter words containing o, l, g

  • -logical — of or relating to the science, doctrine, or theory of
  • -looking — having the appearance mentioned
  • -ologist — -ologist is used to replace '-ology' at the end of nouns in order to form other nouns that refer to people who are concerned with a particular science or subject. For example, a 'biologist' is concerned with biology.
  • aasvogel — a South African vulture
  • abiology — The sciences, such as geology and astronomy, that collectively deal with inorganic or lifeless bodies.
  • acrology — acrophony.
  • aerology — the study of the atmosphere, particularly its upper layers
  • agalloch — the fragrant, resinous wood of an East Indian tree, Aquilaria agallocha, of the mezereum family, used as incense in Asia.
  • agalwood — a soft, resinous wood of the Asain tree Aquilaria malaccensis, known for its aromatic qualities, and used in incense
  • aglossia — congenital absence of the tongue
  • aglycone — a chemical compound
  • agricola — Gnaeus Julius (ˈniːəs ˈdʒuːlɪəs) 40–93 ad, Roman general; governor of Britain who advanced Roman rule north to the Firth of Forth
  • agrology — the scientific study of soils and their potential productivity
  • algernon — a masculine name: dim. Algie, Algy
  • algol 58 — (language)   An early version of ALGOL 60, originally known as "IAL".
  • algol 60 — (language)   ALGOrithmic Language 1960. A portable language for scientific computations. ALGOL 60 was small and elegant. It was block-structured, nested, recursive and free form. It was also the first language to be described in BNF. There were three lexical representations: hardware, reference, and publication. The only structured data types were arrays, but they were permitted to have lower bounds and could be dynamic. It also had conditional expressions; it introduced :=; if-then-else; very general "for" loops; switch declaration (an array of statement labels generalising Fortran's computed goto). Parameters were call-by-name and call-by-value. It had static local "own" variables. It lacked user-defined types, character manipulation and standard I/O. See also EULER, ALGOL 58, ALGOL 68, Foogol.
  • algol 68 — (language)   An extensive revision of ALGOL 60 by Adriaan van Wijngaarden et al. ALGOL 68 was discussed from 1963 by Working Group 2.1 of IFIP. Its definition was accepted in December 1968. ALGOL 68 was the first, and still one of very few, programming languages for which a complete formal specification was created before its implementation. However, this specification was hard to understand due to its formality, the fact that it used an unfamiliar metasyntax notation (not BNF) and its unconventional terminology. One of the singular features of ALGOL 68 was its orthogonal design, making for freedom from arbitrary rules (such as restrictions in other languages that arrays could only be used as parameters but not as results). It also allowed user defined data types, then an unheard-of feature. It featured structural equivalence; automatic type conversion ("coercion") including dereferencing; flexible arrays; generalised loops (for-from-by-to-while-do-od), if-then-else-elif-fi, an integer case statement with an 'out' clause (case-in-out-esac); skip and goto statements; blocks; procedures; user-defined operators; procedure parameters; concurrent execution (par-begin-end); semaphores; generators "heap" and "loc" for dynamic allocation. It had no abstract data types or separate compilation.
  • algology — the branch of biology concerned with the study of algae
  • algonkin — Algonquin
  • algorism — the Arabic or decimal system of counting
  • all gone — finished, used up
  • allegory — An allegory is a story, poem, or painting in which the characters and events are symbols of something else. Allegories are often moral, religious, or political.
  • allegros — Plural form of allegro.
  • allogamy — cross-fertilization in flowering plants
  • allowing — to give permission to or for; permit: to allow a student to be absent; No swimming allowed.
  • alloying — relating to, or used in, alloying
  • alogical — without logic
  • although — You use although to introduce a subordinate clause which contains a statement which contrasts with the statement in the main clause.
  • alunogen — a mineral, hydrous sulfate of aluminum, Al 2 (SO 4) 3 ⋅18H 2 O, occurring as a white, fibrous crust on quarry or mine walls.
  • amylogen — the water-soluble part of the starch granule
  • analogia — a lectern.
  • analogic — based on, involving, or expressing an analogy.
  • analogon — analogue
  • analogue — If one thing is an analogue of another, it is similar in some way.
  • angeldom — The world of angels.
  • angeleno — a native or inhabitant of Los Angeles
  • angelico — Fra (fra), original name Guido di Pietro; monastic name Fra Giovanni da Fiesole. ?1400–55, Italian fresco painter and Dominican friar
  • anglepod — an American wild flowering plant with angular pods, belonging to the milkweed family
  • angleton — a town in S Texas.
  • angolese — a member of any of the tribes residing in Angola.
  • angulose — having angles
  • angulous — angular or having angles
  • antilogy — a contradiction in terms
  • apiology — the scientific study of bees
  • apologal — resembling or related to an apologue
  • apologia — An apologia is a statement in which you defend something that you strongly believe in, for example a way of life, a person's behaviour, or a philosophy.
  • apologie — Archaic spelling of apology.
  • apologue — an allegory or moral fable
  • arcology — a type of architecture concerned with the design of enormous vertical cities that maximize population density and so preserve the surrounding countryside
  • areology — the study of the planet Mars

On this page, we collect all 8-letter words with O-L-G. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 8-letter word that contains in O-L-G to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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