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6-letter words containing t, a, g

  • ragtop — an automobile having a folding canvas top; convertible.
  • ratbag — contemptible person
  • rating — the amount of a charge or payment with reference to some basis of calculation: a high rate of interest on loans.
  • rugate — wrinkle; rugose.
  • rugrat — crawling infant, young child
  • sagest — a profoundly wise person; a person famed for wisdom.
  • satang — a monetary unit and former coin of Thailand, the 100th part of a baht.
  • sating — to satisfy (any appetite or desire) fully.
  • sontagSusan, 1933–2004, U.S. critic, novelist, and essayist.
  • stage2 — A macro language.
  • staged — adapted for or produced on the stage.
  • stager — a person of experience in some profession, way of life, etc.
  • stagey — of, relating to, or suggestive of the stage.
  • staggy — a colt.
  • stalag — a World War II German military camp housing prisoners of war of enlisted ranks.
  • stigma — a mark of disgrace or infamy; a stain or reproach, as on one's reputation.
  • tablog — (language)   A programming language based on first order predicate logic with equality that combines relational programming and functional programming. It has functional notation and unification as its binding mechanism. TABLOG supports a more general subset of standard first order logic than Prolog. It employs the Manna-Waldinger 'deductive-tableau' proof system as an interpreter instead of resolution.
  • tag on — attach, append to sth
  • tag up — to return to the base and touch it before taking another lead or running
  • taggee — someone who has been tagged
  • tagger — a piece or strip of strong paper, plastic, metal, leather, etc., for attaching by one end to something as a mark or label: The price is on the tag.
  • tagine — a large, heavy N African cooking pot with a conical lid
  • tagore — Sir Rabindranath [ruh-been-druh-naht] /rəˈbin drəˌnɑt/ (Show IPA), 1861–1941, Indian poet: Nobel prize 1913.
  • tagrag — riffraff; rabble.
  • taguan — a large nocturnal flying squirrel, Petaurista petaurista, of high forests in the East Indies that uses its long tail as a rudder
  • taigle — to entangle, impede, or delay
  • taking — the act of taking.
  • tanged — a sharp ringing or twanging sound; clang.
  • tanger — a seaport in N Morocco, on the W Strait of Gibraltar: capital of the former Tangier Zone.
  • tangie — a water spirit of Orkney, appearing as a figure draped in seaweed, or as a seahorse
  • tangka — tanga.
  • tangle — to bring together into a mass of confusedly interlaced or intertwisted threads, strands, or other like parts; snarl.
  • tangly — full of tangles; snarled
  • tangor — temple orange.
  • tangun — a small and sturdy pony native to Tibet and Bhutan
  • tanguyYves [eev] /iv/ (Show IPA), 1900–55, French painter, in the U.S. after 1939.
  • taonga — treasure; anything highly prized
  • taping — a long, narrow strip of linen, cotton, or the like, used for tying garments, binding seams or carpets, etc.
  • target — an object, usually marked with concentric circles, to be aimed at in shooting practice or contests.
  • targum — a translation or paraphrase in Aramaic of a book or division of the Old Testament.
  • taring — the weight of the wrapping, receptacle, or conveyance containing goods.
  • tatung — Datong.
  • taught — simple past tense and past participle of teach.
  • tautog — a black food and game fish, Tautoga onitis, inhabiting waters along the North Atlantic coast of the U.S.
  • taxing — wearingly burdensome: the day-to-day, taxing duties of a supervisor.
  • teabag — a container of thin paper or cloth holding a measured amount of tea leaves for making an individual serving of tea.
  • teagle — a hoist for moving goods within a warehouse
  • tegula — (in certain insects) a scalelike lobe at the base of the forewing.
  • telega — a Russian cart of rude construction, having four wheels and no springs.
  • tergal — of or relating to the tergum.
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