10-letter words containing t, a, g
- go too far — take sth past acceptable limits
- go towards — If an amount of money goes towards something, it is used to pay part of the cost of that thing.
- go-carting — Go-carting is the sport of racing or riding on go-carts.
- go-karting — racing in small vehicle
- goalmouths — Plural form of goalmouth.
- goaltender — a goalkeeper.
- goat's-rue — Also called catgut. a hairy American plant, Tephrosia virginiana, of the legume family, having yellow and pink flowers.
- goatfishes — Plural form of goatfish.
- goatsbeard — any of several composite plants of the genus Tragopogon, especially T. pratensis, having yellow flower heads.
- goatsucker — nightjar (def 2).
- godfathers — Plural form of godfather.
- godparents — Plural form of godparent.
- gold coast — a former British territory in W Africa; now a part of Ghana.
- gold plate — a thin coating of gold, usually produced by electroplating
- gold-plate — to coat (base metal) with gold, especially by electroplating.
- goldbeater — a person who pounds gold into thin leaves for use in gilding
- goldplated — to coat (base metal) with gold, especially by electroplating.
- goldthread — a white-flowered plant, Coptis trifolia, of the buttercup family, having a slender, yellow root that is sometimes used as a tonic.
- goliathise — to play Goliath, exaggerate extravagantly
- goliathize — to exaggerate extravagantly
- gondoletta — a small Venetian gondola.
- gonkulator — /gon'kyoo-lay-tr/ (From "Hogan's Heroes", the TV series) A pretentious piece of equipment that actually serves no useful purpose. Usually used to describe one's least favourite piece of computer hardware. See gonk.
- good faith — accordance with standards of honesty, trust, sincerity, etc. (usually preceded by in): If you act in good faith, he'll have no reason to question your motives.
- gota canal — a canal system in S Sweden, connecting Göteborg with the Baltic Sea.
- gothically — In a gothic way.
- gottschalk — Louis Moreau [maw-roh,, moh-] /mɔˈroʊ,, moʊ-/ (Show IPA), 1829–69, U.S. pianist and composer.
- governante — a housekeeper
- grace note — a note not essential to the harmony or melody, added as an embellishment, especially an appoggiatura.
- graciosity — graciousness
- gradations — any process or change taking place through a series of stages, by degrees, or in a gradual manner.
- gradienter — an instrument on a transit for measuring angles of inclination in terms of their tangents.
- gradualist — (biology, politics) One who believes in gradualism.
- graduality — The state or degree of being gradual.
- graduating — a person who has received a degree or diploma on completing a course of study, as in a university, college, or school.
- graduation — an act of graduating; the state of being graduated.
- graffitied — Simple past tense and past participle of graffiti.
- graffitist — plural of graffito.
- grammatist — (historical) A teacher of prose literature and letters in Ancient Greece.
- grand jete — a jump or jeté, preceded by a grand battement or high kick, in which a dancer leaps from one leg and lands on the other.
- grand tier — the first tier of boxes after the parquet circle in a large theater or opera house.
- grand tour — an extended tour of Europe, formerly regarded as a necessary part of the education of young British gentlemen.
- grand turk — an island in the Turks and Caicos Islands of the West Indies. 7 miles (11 km) long.
- grandaunts — Plural form of grandaunt.
- grandstand — the main seating area of a stadium, racetrack, parade route, or the like, usually consisting of tiers with rows of individual seats.
- granulated — Simple past tense and past participle of granulate.
- granulator — A machine that forms material into granules.
- grapefruit — a large, roundish, yellow-skinned, edible citrus fruit having a juicy, acid pulp.
- grapestone — the seed of a grape.
- graphitize — to convert into graphite.
- graphitoid — resembling graphite