0%

10-letter words containing o, r, g, e, n

  • ideamonger — a person who originates and promotes or deals in ideas.
  • igniferous — (rare) Producing fire.
  • ignorances — the state or fact of being ignorant; lack of knowledge, learning, information, etc.
  • impowering — Present participle of impower.
  • incouraged — Simple past tense and past participle of incourage.
  • ingression — the act of going in or entering.
  • inorganize — To corrupt an organization; disorganize.
  • integrator — a person or thing that integrates.
  • integrious — (rare) Marked by integrity.
  • intergroup — taking place or being between groups: intergroup relationships.
  • intergrown — That have grown together and through each other.
  • interorgan — (medicine) Between organs.
  • interrogee — a person who is interrogated
  • intertrigo — Inflammation caused by the rubbing of one area of skin on another.
  • introgress — (biology, genetics) To infiltrate the genes of one species into the gene pool of another through repeated backcrossing of an interspecific hybrid.
  • invigorate — to give vigor to; fill with life and energy; energize.
  • ironmonger — a dealer in hardware.
  • irreligion — lack of religion.
  • jargonized — Simple past tense and past participle of jargonize.
  • jeoparding — Present participle of jeopard.
  • journeying — a traveling from one place to another, usually taking a rather long time; trip: a six-day journey across the desert.
  • jungle rot — any cutaneous disease or condition caused or induced by a tropical climate.
  • kingsolverBarbara, born 1955, U.S. novelist, short-story writer, and essayist.
  • konigsberg — a former province in NE Germany: an enclave separated from Germany by the Polish Corridor; now divided between Poland and the Russian Federation. 14,283 sq. mi. (36,993 sq. km). Capital: Königsberg.
  • lageniform — shaped like a flask; having an enlarged base tapering to a narrow neck.
  • lagerphone — (Australia) A generally homemade percussion instrument consisting of crown cap beer bottle tops loosely nailed to a pole (often a broom handle) and a board mounted cross-ways on the pole (the head of the broom), and played by striking the pole on the ground or with a stick, by drawing the serrated stick across the pole, or by shaking the instrument. (From 1952.).
  • legionaire — Misspelling of legionnaire.
  • lemongrass — A fragrant tropical grass that yields an oil that smells lemon. It is widely used in Asian cooking and in perfumery and medicine.
  • lignotuber — (botany) A starchy enlargement (caudex), usually of a root, of a woody plant, serving to store water.
  • lobstering — the act, process, or business of capturing lobsters.
  • loganberry — the large, dark-red, acid fruit of a plant, Rubus ursinus loganobaccus.
  • long green — paper money; cash.
  • long horse — vaulting horse.
  • long metre — a stanzaic form consisting of four octosyllabic lines, used esp for hymns
  • long press — (on a tablet or smartphone) the act of pressing one's finger down on an icon or other part of the screen for several seconds, as to activate a task or access additional options.
  • long purse — wealth; riches
  • long rifle — Kentucky rifle.
  • long-eared — (of an animal) having long ears
  • long-range — considering or extending into the future: a long-range outlook; long-range plans.
  • longbeards — Plural form of longbeard.
  • longed-for — A longed-for thing or event is one that someone wants very much.
  • longhaired — Having long hair.
  • longprimer — in printing, a size of type intermediate between small pica and bourgeois
  • longstreetJames, 1821–1904, Confederate general in the U.S. Civil War.
  • lorgnettes — Plural form of lorgnette.
  • loundering — a beating
  • lounge bar — more elegant bar
  • lounge car — club car.
  • loungewear — articles of clothing suitable for wear during leisure time, especially in the home.
  • low german — the West Germanic languages not included in the High German group, as English, Dutch, Flemish, or Plattdeutsch. Abbreviation: LG. Compare High German (def 1).
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?