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7-letter words containing s, g, i

  • baggies — (lowercase) Informal. any small bag or packet.
  • bagnios — Plural form of bagnio.
  • bagsing — Present participle of bags.
  • bakings — Plural form of baking.
  • barings — Plural form of baring.
  • bashing — a crushing blow.
  • basking — to lie in or be exposed to a pleasant warmth: to bask in the sunshine.
  • bassing — Present participle of bass.
  • basting — loose temporary stitches; tacking
  • bergius — Friedrich (Karl Rudolph) (ˈfriːdrɪç). 1884– 1949, German chemist, who invented a process for producing oil by high-pressure hydrogenation of coal: Nobel prize for chemistry 1931
  • besiege — If you are besieged by people, many people want something from you and continually bother you.
  • besting — of the highest quality, excellence, or standing: the best work; the best students.
  • biggest — large, as in size, height, width, or amount: a big house; a big quantity.
  • biggish — Something that is biggish is fairly big.
  • bigness — the fact or condition of being large in size, extent, amount, etc.
  • bisnaga — a large barrel-shaped cactus found in SW USA and NW Mexico
  • boggish — like a bog
  • borings — Machinery. the act or process of making or enlarging a hole. the hole so made.
  • bossing — the act of shaping malleable metal, such as lead cladding, with mallets to fit a surface
  • bridges — Robert (Seymour). 1844–1930, English poet: poet laureate (1913–30)
  • brights — the high beam of the headlights of a motor vehicle
  • busgirl — a waiter's assistant
  • bushing — an adaptor having ends of unequal diameters, often with internal screw threads, used to connect pipes of different sizes
  • bushpig — a wild pig, Potamochoerus porcus, inhabiting forests in tropical Africa and Madagascar. It is brown or black, with pale markings on the face
  • busking — Chiefly British. to entertain by dancing, singing, or reciting on the street or in a public place.
  • bussing — a large motor vehicle, having a long body, equipped with seats or benches for passengers, usually operating as part of a scheduled service; omnibus.
  • busying — actively and attentively engaged in work or a pastime: busy with her work.
  • byrgius — a crater in the third quadrant of the face of the moon: about 40 miles (64 km) in diameter.
  • canings — Plural form of caning.
  • cashing — money in the form of coins or banknotes, especially that issued by a government.
  • casings — Plural form of casing.
  • casking — a container made and shaped like a barrel, especially one larger and stronger, for holding liquids.
  • casting — A casting is an object or piece of machinery which has been made by pouring a liquid such as hot metal into a container, so that when it hardens it has the required shape.
  • causing — a person or thing that acts, happens, or exists in such a way that some specific thing happens as a result; the producer of an effect: You have been the cause of much anxiety. What was the cause of the accident?
  • cawings — Plural form of cawing.
  • ceasing — to stop; discontinue: Not all medieval beliefs have ceased to exist.
  • cessing — British. a tax, assessment, or lien.
  • chasing — the act of chasing; pursuit: The chase lasted a day.
  • chigoes — Plural form of chigoe.
  • chusing — Present participle of chuse.
  • ciggies — Plural form of ciggy.
  • cissing — the appearance of pinholes, craters, etc, in paintwork due to poor adhesion of the paint to the surface
  • closing — The closing part of an activity or period of time is the final part of it.
  • codings — Plural form of coding.
  • cognise — to perceive; become conscious of; know.
  • comings — Plural form of coming.
  • congius — a unit of liquid measure equal to 1 Imperial gallon
  • consign — To consign something or someone to a place where they will be forgotten about, or to an unpleasant situation or place, means to put them there.
  • contigs — Plural form of contig.
  • copings — Plural form of coping.
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