10-letter words containing p, l, a, y, g
- play games — an amusement or pastime: children's games.
- playacting — to engage in make-believe.
- playground — an area used for outdoor play or recreation, especially by children, and often containing recreational equipment such as slides and swings.
- playmaking — the initiating of offensive plays in sports
- playwright — a writer of plays; dramatist.
- pleadingly — the act of a person who pleads.
- poignantly — keenly distressing to the feelings: poignant regret.
- polygamist — a person who practices or favors polygamy.
- polygamize — to practise polygamy
- polygamous — of, pertaining to, characterized by, or practicing polygamy; polygamic.
- polygraphy — a code
- polyphagia — Pathology. excessive desire to eat.
- polyphagic — Pathology. excessive desire to eat.
- potamology — the study of rivers.
- praisingly — in a praising manner; with praise
- prankingly — showily, in an ostentatious or pranking manner
- praxeology — the study of human conduct.
- prodigally — wastefully or recklessly extravagant: prodigal expenditure.
- profligacy — shameless dissoluteness.
- pyrogallol — a white, crystalline, water-soluble, poisonous, solid, phenolic compound, C 6 H 3 (OH) 3 , obtained by heating gallic acid and water: used chiefly as a developer in photography, as a mordant for wool, in dyeing, and in medicine in the treatment of certain skin conditions.
- snappingly — involving a snap
- spankingly — in a spanking manner
- speakingly — in an eloquent manner
- stylograph — a fountain pen in which the writing point is a fine, hollow tube instead of a nib.
- telegraphy — the art or practice of constructing or operating telegraphs.
- xylographs — Plural form of xylograph.
- xylography — The art of making woodcuts or wood engravings, especially by a relatively primitive technique.
- xylophagan — an insect in the Xylophaga or Xylophagi that eats wood
- young plan — a plan reducing the reparations provided by the Dawes plan, devised by an international committee headed by Owen D. Young and put into effect in 1929.