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9-letter words containing t, a, g

  • fulgurate — to flash or dart like lightning.
  • fumigants — Plural form of fumigant.
  • fumigated — Simple past tense and past participle of fumigate.
  • fumigator — a person or thing that fumigates.
  • fungistat — a fungistatic substance or preparation.
  • fustigate — to cudgel; beat; punish severely.
  • g & t — gin and tonic
  • gabaonite — Gibeonite.
  • gadabouts — Plural form of gadabout.
  • gadgeteer — a person who invents or is particularly fond of using gadgets.
  • gaeltacht — any of the regions in Ireland in which Irish Gaelic is the vernacular speech. The form Gaeltacht is sometimes also used to mean the region of Scotland in which Scottish Gaelic is spoken
  • gain time — delay sth for advantage
  • gaitskell — Hugh Todd Naylor [ney-ler] /ˈneɪ lər/ (Show IPA), 1906–63, English economist and statesman: Labour party leader 1955–63.
  • galactico — (football) A football superstar.
  • galactoid — resembling milk; milky.
  • 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.
  • galantine — a dish of boned poultry, wrapped in its skin and poached in gelatin stock, pressed, and served cold with aspic or its own jelly.
  • galatians — a book in the New Testament, written to the Christians in Galatia. Abbreviation: Gal.
  • galbraithJohn Kenneth, 1908–2006, U.S. economist, born in Canada.
  • gall gnat — any of several dipterous insects of the family Cecidomyiidae, the larvae of which form characteristic galls on plants.
  • gall mite — a mite of the family Eriophyidae that feeds on plant juices, damaging buds, leaves, and twigs and causing galls and other deformities.
  • gallanted — Simple past tense and past participle of gallant.
  • gallantly — brave, spirited, noble-minded, or chivalrous: a gallant knight; a gallant rescue attempt.
  • gallantry — dashing courage; heroic bravery; noble-minded behavior.
  • gallaudetThomas Hopkins, 1787–1851, U.S. educator of the deaf and writer.
  • gallerist — The owner or operator of an art gallery.
  • gallipots — Plural form of gallipot.
  • gallivant — to wander about, seeking pleasure or diversion; gad.
  • gallstone — an abnormal stonelike mass, usually of cholesterol, formed in the gallbladder or bile passages.
  • galvanist — a person who studies or practises galvanism
  • galveston — a seaport in SE Texas, on an island at the mouth of Galveston Bay.
  • game tree — (games)   A tree representing contingencies in a game. Each node in a game tree represents a possible position (e.g., possible configuration of pieces on a chessboard) in the game, and each branching ("edge" in graph terms) represents a possible move.
  • gamesters — Plural form of gamester.
  • gangliate — having ganglia.
  • gangsters — Plural form of gangster.
  • gannister — ganister
  • gantelope — gauntlet2 .
  • gantlines — Plural form of gantline.
  • garagiste — a small-scale entrepreneurial wine-maker, originally from the Bordeaux region of France, esp one who does not adhere to the traditions of wine-making
  • gargantua — an amiable giant and king, noted for his enormous capacity for food and drink, in Rabelais' Gargantua and Pantagruel.
  • garmented — (poetic) Wearing a garment; attired.
  • garnetted — Textiles. to reduce (waste material) to its fibrous state for reuse in textile manufacturing.
  • garniture — something that garnishes; decoration; adornment.
  • garotting — to execute by the garrote.
  • garreteer — a person who lives in a garret, especially a penniless writer
  • garroting — a method of capital punishment of Spanish origin in which an iron collar is tightened around a condemned person's neck until death occurs by strangulation or by injury to the spinal column at the base of the brain.
  • garrotted — to execute by the garrote.
  • garrulity — the quality of being garrulous; talkativeness; loquacity.
  • gartering — Present participle of garter.
  • gas giant — one of the four planets in our solar system that are composed chiefly of hydrogen and helium, namely Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune
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