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5-letter words containing o, r, g

  • -goer — -goer is added to words such as 'theatre', 'church', and 'film' to form nouns which describe people who regularly go to that type of place or event.
  • aggro — Aggro is the difficulties and problems that are involved in something.
  • agora — the marketplace in Athens, used for popular meetings, or any similar place of assembly in ancient Greece
  • agro- — Agro- is used to form nouns and adjectives which refer to things relating to agriculture, or to agriculture combined with another activity.
  • algor — chill
  • angor — extreme distress or mental anguish, usually of physical origin.
  • argol — crude potassium hydrogentartrate, deposited as a crust on the sides of wine vats
  • argon — Argon is an inert gas which exists in very small amounts in the atmosphere. It is used in electric lights.
  • argos — an ancient city in SE Greece, in the NE Peloponnese: one of the oldest Greek cities, it dominated the Peloponnese in the 7th century bc. Pop (municipality): 29 505 (2001)
  • argot — An argot is a special language used by a particular group of people, which other people find difficult to understand.
  • bogor — a city in Indonesia, in W Java: botanical gardens and research institutions. Pop: 750 819 (2000)
  • bourg — a French market town, esp one beside a castle
  • broga — an exercise regime for men that combines fitness exercises with traditional yoga postures
  • cargo — The cargo of a ship or plane is the goods that it is carrying.
  • coorg — a former province of SW India: since 1956 part of Karnataka state
  • corge — /korj/ Yet another metasyntactic variable, named after a cat invented by Mike Gallaher and propagated by the GOSMACS documentation. See grault.
  • corgi — A corgi is a type of small dog with short legs and a pointed nose.
  • drago — Luis María [loo-is muh-ree-uh;; Spanish loo-ees mah-ree-ah] /ˈlu ɪs məˈri ə;; Spanish luˈis mɑˈri ɑ/ (Show IPA), 1859–1921, Argentine jurist and statesman.
  • droog — A young man belonging to a street gang.
  • dsorg — data set organization
  • ergon — (physics) Work, measured in terms of the quantity of heat to which it is equivalent.
  • ergot — A fungal disease of rye and other cereals in which black, elongated, fruiting bodies grow in the ears of the cereal. Eating contaminated food can result in ergotism.
  • erugo — verdigris
  • fargoWilliam George, 1818–81, U.S. businessman: pioneered in express shipping and banking.
  • forge — to form by heating and hammering; beat into shape.
  • forgo — to abstain or refrain from; do without.
  • frogs — Plural form of frog.
  • gaborDennis, 1900–79, British physicist, born in Hungary: inventor of holography; Nobel Prize 1971.
  • garboGreta (Greta Lovisa Gustaffson) 1905–90, U.S. film actress, born in Sweden.
  • gator — Southern U.S. Informal. alligator.
  • genro — any of the unofficial elder statesmen of Japan who influenced the government c1875–1940.
  • giron — a charge consisting of the lower half of a diagonally divided quarter, usually in the top left corner of the shield
  • giros — Alternative form of gyro.
  • gloar — (obsolete, intransitive) To squint; to stare.
  • glore — (archaic) to glare.
  • glork — /glork/ 1. Used as a name for just about anything. See foo. 2. Similar to glitch, but usually used reflexively. "My program just glorked itself." See also glark.
  • glory — very great praise, honor, or distinction bestowed by common consent; renown: to win glory on the field of battle.
  • glour — Alternative spelling of glower.
  • gobar — Dried cow dung used directly as fuel or as a source of gas.
  • goers — Plural form of goer.
  • gofer — an employee whose chief duty is running errands.
  • gogra — a river in SW Tibet, Nepal, and N India, flowing S and SE to the Ganges River. 640 miles (1030 km) long.
  • gomer — an undesirable hospital patient.
  • goner — a person or thing that is dead, lost, or past recovery.
  • goral — a short-horned goat antelope, Naemorhedus goral, of the mountainous regions of southeastern Asia: an endangered species.
  • gordyBerry, Jr, born 1929, U.S. music and record producer: founder of Motown records.
  • gored — to make or furnish with a gore or gores.
  • gorenCharles Henry, 1901–91, U.S authority and writer on contract bridge.
  • gores — Plural form of gore.
  • gorey — Edward (St. John) 1925–2000, U.S. writer and illustrator.

On this page, we collect all 5-letter words with O-R-G. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 5-letter word that contains in O-R-G to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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