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9-letter words containing t, a, g

  • oxygenate — to treat, combine, or enrich with oxygen: to oxygenate the blood.
  • pageantry — spectacular display; pomp: the pageantry of a coronation.
  • paginated — to indicate the sequence of pages in (a book, manuscript, etc.) by placing numbers or other characters on each leaf; to number the pages of.
  • paint gun — an air gun that fires paint capsules, as used in paintballing
  • palleting — a small, low, portable platform on which goods are placed for storage or moving, as in a warehouse or vehicle.
  • pantagamy — a communal marriage system amongst members of a community or household
  • pantingly — eagerly
  • pantology — a systematic view of all human knowledge.
  • parentage — derivation or descent from parents or ancestors; birth, origin, or lineage: a man of distinguished parentage.
  • parenting — a father or a mother.
  • pargasite — a green or bluegreen variety of hornblende.
  • pargeting — any of various plasters or roughcasts for covering walls or other surfaces, especially a mortar of lime, hair, and cow dung for lining chimney flues.
  • pargetter — plasterer
  • parroting — any of numerous hook-billed, often brilliantly colored birds of the order Psittaciformes, as the cockatoo, lory, macaw, or parakeet, having the ability to mimic speech and often kept as pets.
  • part song — a song with parts for several voices, especially one meant to be sung without accompaniment.
  • partaking — to take or have a part or share along with others; participate (usually followed by in): He won't partake in the victory celebration.
  • partridge — any of several Old World gallinaceous game birds of the subfamily Perdicinae, especially Perdix perdix.
  • partygoer — a person who enjoys or frequently attends parties and celebrations.
  • pastiglia — a plaster used during the Italian Renaissance for bas-relief ornament of furniture, being applied in layers, molded, carved, and gilded.
  • pastorage — pastorate.
  • pastoring — a minister or priest in charge of a church.
  • pasturage — pasture.
  • pasturing — Also called pastureland [pas-cher-land, pahs-] /ˈpæs tʃərˌlænd, ˈpɑs-/ (Show IPA). an area covered with grass or other plants used or suitable for the grazing of livestock; grassland.
  • patagonia — a tableland region of southern Argentina.
  • patchogue — a town on S Long Island, in SE New York.
  • pathogens — any disease-producing agent, especially a virus, bacterium, or other microorganism.
  • pathogeny — the production and development of disease.
  • pathology — the science or the study of the origin, nature, and course of diseases.
  • patrology — Also called patristics. the branch of theology dealing with the teachings of the church fathers.
  • patronage — the financial support or business provided to a store, hotel, or the like, by customers, clients, or paying guests.
  • pattering — to talk glibly or rapidly, especially with little regard to meaning; chatter.
  • paysagist — a painter of landscapes
  • peg pants — close-fitting trousers made of stretch fabric
  • pegmatite — a coarsely crystalline granite or other high-silica rock occurring in veins or dikes.
  • pentagram — a five-pointed, star-shaped figure made by extending the sides of a regular pentagon until they meet, used as an occult symbol by the Pythagoreans and later philosophers, by magicians, etc.
  • pentalogy — a combination of five closely related things, esp (in medicine) closely connected symptoms or (in art) related works of art
  • pentangle — pentagram.
  • petrograd — former name (1914–24) of St. Petersburg (def 2).
  • petrogram — a drawing or painting on rock, especially one made by a member of a prehistoric people.
  • petrolage — the addition of petrol to the surface of a body of water to get rid of mosquitoes
  • phagocyte — any cell, as a macrophage, that ingests and destroys foreign particles, bacteria, and cell debris.
  • phone tag — telephone tag.
  • photalgia — pain, as in an eye, that is caused by intensity of light.
  • photogram — a silhouette photograph made by placing an object directly on sensitized paper and exposing it to light.
  • piagetian — of or relating to the theories developed by Jean Piaget.
  • pictogram — pictograph.
  • pig latin — a form of language, used especially by children, that is derived from ordinary English by moving the first consonant or consonant cluster of each word to the end of the word and adding the sound (ā), as in Eakspay igpay atinlay for “Speak Pig Latin.”.
  • pigmental — of or relating to a pigment or pigments, or the natural colouring of a person or thing
  • pignorate — to pledge or pawn
  • pit grave — a shallow grave hollowed out of a bed of rock or the floor of a tholos.
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