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6-letter words containing s, g, d

  • greeds — excessive or rapacious desire, especially for wealth or possessions.
  • grinds — (Ireland, colloquial, plurale tantum) tutoring; extra lessons in a specific subject outside of school hours. Grinds are often given by private individuals or firms, and might not be provided by the school.
  • guards — to keep safe from harm or danger; protect; watch over: to guard the ruler.
  • guesdeJules [zhyl] /ʒül/ (Show IPA), (Mathieu Basile) 1845–1922, French socialist leader, editor, and writer.
  • guides — Plural form of guide.
  • guilds — an organization of persons with related interests, goals, etc., especially one formed for mutual aid or protection.
  • guised — general external appearance; aspect; semblance: an old principle in a new guise.
  • gushed — to flow out or issue suddenly, copiously, or forcibly, as a fluid from confinement: Water gushed from the broken pipe.
  • gusted — Archaic. flavor or taste.
  • hedges — Plural form of hedge.
  • hodgesJohn Cornelius ("Johnny"; "Rabbit"; "Jeep") 1906–70, U.S. jazz saxophonist.
  • judges — a public officer authorized to hear and decide cases in a court of law; a magistrate charged with the administration of justice.
  • kedges — Plural form of kedge.
  • ledges — Plural form of ledge.
  • lodges — Plural form of lodge.
  • midges — Plural form of midge.
  • ms-dog — (abuse)   A pejorative name for MS-DOS.
  • nudges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of nudge.
  • osgood — a male given name.
  • sagged — to sink or bend downward by weight or pressure, especially in the middle: The roof sags.
  • seadog — fogbow.
  • sedged — made of sedge.
  • serged — to overcast (unfinished seams or edges, as in a fabric or rug), especially by machine, in order to prevent fraying.
  • siding — one of the surfaces forming the outside of or bounding a thing, or one of the lines bounding a geometric figure.
  • sieged — the act or process of surrounding and attacking a fortified place in such a way as to isolate it from help and supplies, for the purpose of lessening the resistance of the defenders and thereby making capture possible.
  • sighed — to let out one's breath audibly, as from sorrow, weariness, or relief.
  • signed — a token; indication.
  • sigrid — a female given name: from a Scandinavian word meaning “victory.”.
  • sigurd — the son of Sigmund and Hjordis and the husband of Gudrun. He kills the dragon Fafnir, acquires the treasure of Andvari, wins Brynhild for Gunnar, and is finally killed at the behest of Brynhild, whom he had once promised to marry: corresponds to Siegfried of the Nibelungenlied.
  • singed — to burn superficially or slightly; scorch.
  • sledge — a vehicle of various forms, mounted on runners and often drawn by draft animals, used for traveling or for conveying loads over snow, ice, rough ground, etc.
  • sludge — mud, mire, or ooze; slush.
  • sludgy — of or relating to sludge.
  • smidge — a very small amount or part
  • smudge — a dirty mark or smear.
  • smudgy — marked with smudges; smeared; smeary.
  • snudge — to be miserly or stingy
  • staged — adapted for or produced on the stage.
  • stodge — to stuff full, especially with food or drink; gorge.
  • stodgy — heavy, dull, or uninteresting; tediously commonplace; boring: a stodgy Victorian novel.
  • sughed — sough2 .
  • sundog — parhelion.
  • surged — a strong, wavelike, forward movement, rush, or sweep: the onward surge of an angry mob.
  • szeged — a city in S Hungary, on the Tisza River.
  • wedges — Plural form of wedge.
  • wodges — Plural form of wodge.
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