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9-letter words containing s, l, o, g

  • dal segno — (of a piece of music) to be repeated from the point marked with a sign to the word fine
  • delousing — Present participle of delouse.
  • diagonals — Plural form of diagonal.
  • dialogism — a deduction with one premise and a disjunctive conclusion
  • dialogist — a person who writes or takes part in a dialogue
  • dialogues — Plural form of dialogue.
  • diglossia — the widespread existence within a society of sharply divergent formal and informal varieties of a language each used in different social contexts or for performing different functions, as the existence of Katharevusa and Demotic in modern Greece.
  • diglossic — the widespread existence within a society of sharply divergent formal and informal varieties of a language each used in different social contexts or for performing different functions, as the existence of Katharevusa and Demotic in modern Greece.
  • discology — the study of gramophone records
  • dislodged — Simple past tense and past participle of dislodge.
  • dislodges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dislodge.
  • disoblige — to refuse or neglect to oblige; act contrary to the desire or convenience of; fail to accommodate.
  • doggishly — In a doggish manner.
  • dosiology — the study of doses of drugs
  • duologues — Plural form of duologue.
  • ecologism — An ideology focusing on ecology and the environment.
  • ecologist — the branch of biology dealing with the relations and interactions between organisms and their environment, including other organisms.
  • egglestonEdward, 1837–1902, U.S. author, editor, and clergyman.
  • elongates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elongate.
  • enclosing — Present participle of enclose.
  • enologist — An expert in the science of enology.
  • epilogues — Plural form of epilogue.
  • espagnole — a tomato and sherry sauce
  • eulogised — Simple past tense and past participle of eulogise.
  • eulogises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of eulogise.
  • eulogiums — Plural form of eulogium.
  • eulogizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of eulogize.
  • festilogy — a treatise on the subject of church festivals
  • filmgoers — Plural form of filmgoer.
  • flag stop — a bus stop at which a bus only stops if there is someone waiting or if someone wants to get off the bus
  • flagitous — (archaic) wicked, reprehensible.
  • flagpoles — Plural form of flagpole.
  • flagstone — Also called flag. a flat stone slab used especially for paving.
  • flamingos — Plural form of flamingo.
  • floggings — Plural form of flogging.
  • floodings — a form of psychotherapy in which the patient receives abrupt and intense, rather than gradual, exposure to a fear-producing situation.
  • folk song — a song originating among the people of a country or area, passed by oral tradition from one singer or generation to the next, often existing in several versions, and marked generally by simple, modal melody and stanzaic, narrative verse.
  • folk-sing — an informal gathering for the singing of folk songs.
  • folksongs — Plural form of folksong.
  • footslogs — Plural form of footslog.
  • fossilogy — (archaic, 1776-19th century) The science or study of fossils.
  • froglings — Plural form of frogling.
  • frogstool — a toadstool.
  • fulgorous — brilliant; dazzling
  • fulgurous — characteristic of or resembling lightning: the fulgurous cracking of a whip.
  • furloughs — Plural form of furlough.
  • galactose — a white, crystalline, water-soluble hexose sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , obtained in its dextrorotatory form from milk sugar by hydrolysis and in its levorotatory form from mucilages.
  • galinsoga — any of several weedy composite plants of the genus Galinsoga, especially G. ciliata or G. parviflora, having small flower heads with short, sparse white rays.
  • gallipots — Plural form of gallipot.
  • gallopers — Plural form of galloper.
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