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8-letter words containing r, e, g, i, s

  • isegoria — Equality of all in freedom of speech.
  • jeerings — Plural form of jeering.
  • jerkings — Plural form of jerking.
  • kringles — Plural form of kringle.
  • lasering — Present participle of laser.
  • lighters — Plural form of lighter.
  • lingster — an interpreter
  • lysergic — Used in designation of lysergic acid, lysergic acid diethylamide.
  • magister — Master; sir: -- a title of the Middle Ages, given to a person in authority, or to one having a license from a university to teach philosophy and the liberal arts.
  • migrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of migrate.
  • misgrade — a degree or step in a scale, as of rank, advancement, quality, value, or intensity: the best grade of paper.
  • negroism — the doctrine or advocacy of equal rights for black people.
  • newsgirl — a girl who sells or delivers newspapers.
  • nighters — Plural form of nighter.
  • organise — to form as or into a whole consisting of interdependent or coordinated parts, especially for united action: to organize a committee.
  • pershing — a 38-foot (12 meters) U.S. Army surface-to-surface nuclear missile with a single warhead and range of more than 1000 miles (1609 km).
  • pressing — urgent; demanding immediate attention: a pressing need.
  • prestige — reputation or influence arising from success, achievement, rank, or other favorable attributes.
  • readingsRufus Daniel Isaacs, 1st Marquis of, 1860–1935, Lord Chief Justice of England 1913–21; viceroy of India 1921–26.
  • reassign — to give or allocate; allot: to assign rooms at a hotel.
  • redesign — to prepare the preliminary sketch or the plans for (a work to be executed), especially to plan the form and structure of: to design a new bridge.
  • redigest — to digest again
  • refusing — to decline to accept (something offered): to refuse an award.
  • regalism — the principle that royalty have the highest power, esp when referring to church affairs
  • regalist — a person who believes in or promotes regalism
  • register — a list or record of such acts, events, etc.
  • registry — Windows Registry
  • reingest — to take, as food, into the body (opposed to egest).
  • residing — to replace the siding on (a building).
  • resigned — submissive or acquiescent.
  • resignee — a person who has resigned or is about to resign.
  • resining — any of a class of nonvolatile, solid or semisolid organic substances, as copal or mastic, that consist of amorphous mixtures of carboxylic acids and are obtained directly from certain plants as exudations or prepared by polymerization of simple molecules: used in medicine and in the making of varnishes and plastics.
  • resiting — the position or location of a town, building, etc., especially as to its environment: the site of our summer cabin.
  • respighi — Ottorino [awt-taw-ree-naw] /ˌɔt tɔˈri nɔ/ (Show IPA), 1879–1936, Italian composer.
  • respring — to rise, leap, move, or act suddenly and swiftly, as by a sudden dart or thrust forward or outward, or being suddenly released from a coiled or constrained position: to spring into the air; a tiger about to spring.
  • restring — a slender cord or thick thread used for binding or tying; line.
  • resuming — to take up or go on with again after interruption; continue: to resume a journey.
  • riesling — Horticulture. a variety of grape. the vine bearing this grape, grown in Europe and California.
  • rightest — in accordance with what is good, proper, or just: right conduct.
  • ringless — a typically circular band of metal or other durable material, especially one of gold or other precious metal, often set with gems, for wearing on the finger as an ornament, a token of betrothal or marriage, etc.
  • ringlets — locks of hair hanging down in spiral curls
  • ringside — the area immediately surrounding a ring, especially the area occupied by the first row of seats on all sides of a boxing or wrestling ring.
  • ringster — a member of a ring, especially a political or price-fixing ring.
  • ringwise — (of a boxer) used to being in a boxing ring and able to respond appropriately
  • salering — an enclosed area for livestock at market
  • salinger — J(erome) D(avid) 1971–2010, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • sanglier — a closely woven fabric made of mohair or worsted, constructed in plain weave, and finished to simulate the coat of a boar.
  • scaliger — Joseph Justus [juhs-tuh s] /ˈdʒʌs təs/ (Show IPA), 1540–1609, French scholar and critic.
  • scriggle — to wriggle
  • scroggie — having scrogs upon it
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