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6-letter words containing s, a, n, g

  • kiangs — Plural form of kiang.
  • lasing — the generation of coherent light by a laser.
  • ligans — lagan.
  • logans — Plural form of logan.
  • magnes — a magnetic iron ore
  • magnus — the Great Year: a cycle of years, usually a thousand, that begins with a Golden Age, steadily deteriorates, and ends with a universal catastrophe, either a fire or a flood.
  • mangas — Plural form of manga.
  • mangos — Plural form of mango.
  • mungas — Plural form of munga.
  • musang — A small animal of Java (Paradoxirus fasciatus), allied to the civets. It swallows, but does not digest, large quantities of ripe coffee berries, thus serving to disseminate the coffee plant.
  • niggas — Plural form of nigga.
  • nongas — A substance that is not a gas.
  • orangs — Plural form of orang.
  • organs — Also called pipe organ. a musical instrument consisting of one or more sets of pipes sounded by means of compressed air, played by means of one or more keyboards, and capable of producing a wide range of musical effects.
  • rasing — to tear down; demolish; level to the ground: to raze a row of old buildings.
  • s-lang — (language)   A small but highly functional embedded interpreter. S-Lang was a stack-based postfix language resembling Forth and BC/DC with limited support for infix notation. Now it has a C-like infix syntax. Arrays, stings, integers, floating-point and autoloading are all suported. The editor JED embeds S-lang. S-Lang is available under the GNU Library General Public License. It runs on MS-DOS, Unix, and VMS. E-mail: John E. Davis <[email protected]>.
  • sagene — a fishing net
  • sagoin — a South American monkey
  • saigon — a former country in SE Asia that comprised Vietnam S of about 17° N latitude; a separate state 1954–75; now part of reunified Vietnam. Capital: Saigon.
  • sangar — a breastwork of stone or sods
  • sangerFrederick, 1918–2013, English biochemist: Nobel Prize in chemistry 1958.
  • sangha — a community of Buddhist monks.
  • sangli — a city in S Maharashtra, in SW India, on the Krishna River.
  • sargon — died 705 b.c, king of Assyria 722–705.
  • sarong — a loose-fitting skirtlike garment formed by wrapping a strip of cloth around the lower part of the body, worn by both men and women in the Malay Archipelago and certain islands of the Pacific Ocean.
  • satang — a monetary unit and former coin of Thailand, the 100th part of a baht.
  • sating — to satisfy (any appetite or desire) fully.
  • saving — tending or serving to save; rescuing; preserving.
  • sawing — a tool or device for cutting, typically a thin blade of metal with a series of sharp teeth.
  • saying — what a person says or has to say.
  • semang — a member of a Negrito people of the Malay Peninsula.
  • senega — the dried root of a milkwort, Polygala senega, of the eastern U.S., used as an expectorant and diuretic.
  • serang — Ceram.
  • shango — a W African religious cult surviving in some parts of the Caribbean
  • signacPaul [pawl] /pɔl/ (Show IPA), 1863–1935, French painter.
  • signal — anything that serves to indicate, warn, direct, command, or the like, as a light, a gesture, an act, etc.: a traffic signal; a signal to leave.
  • sikang — a former province in W China, now part of Sichuan.
  • singan — Older Spelling. Xian.
  • skagen — Skaw, The.
  • slangy — of, of the nature of, or containing slang: a slangy expression.
  • slogan — a distinctive cry, phrase, or motto of any party, group, manufacturer, or person; catchword or catch phrase.
  • snaggy — having snags or sharp projections, as a tree.
  • songka — a river in SE Asia, flowing SE from SW China through Indochina to the Gulf of Tonkin. 500 miles (800 km) long.
  • sontagSusan, 1933–2004, U.S. critic, novelist, and essayist.
  • sprang — a simple past tense of spring.
  • syngas — synthetic natural gas. See under synthetic fuel.
  • tsonga — a Bantu language spoken in Mozambique, Zambia, and South Africa.
  • unsnag — to free from being caught on something.
  • wagons — Plural form of wagon.
  • whangs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of whang.
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