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10-letter words containing t, e, g

  • allergists — Plural form of allergist.
  • alley gate — a metal spiked gate erected behind a terrace of houses to deter burglars
  • allignment — Archaic form of alignment.
  • altogether — You use altogether to emphasize that something has stopped, been done, or finished completely.
  • amalgamate — When two or more things, especially organizations, amalgamate or are amalgamated, they become one large thing.
  • amnestying — Present participle of amnesty.
  • amygdalate — relating to, having, or bearing almonds
  • anagenetic — Biology. the progressive evolution of a species. Compare catagenesis.
  • anecdotage — anecdotes collectively
  • angel dust — PCP1
  • angle shot — a picture taken with the camera pointed obliquely at the subject, sometimes causing distortion of perspective and proportion.
  • anglesmith — a blacksmith skilled in forging angle irons, beams, etc., into various forms used in shipbuilding.
  • anogenital — Of or relating to the anus and genitals.
  • antagonise — to make hostile or unfriendly; make an enemy or antagonist of: His speech antagonized many voters.
  • antagonize — If you antagonize someone, you make them feel angry or hostile towards you.
  • anteceding — to go before, in time, order, rank, etc.; precede: Shakespeare antecedes Milton.
  • antedating — An example or instance of a word, phrase, etc., at a date earlier than previously known or recorded.
  • antichange — Opposing change.
  • antifogger — an antifoggant.
  • antigorite — a variety of serpentine occurring in a brownish-green lamellar form.
  • antilogies — Plural form of antilogy.
  • antimerger — opposed to corporate mergers
  • antiplague — acting against plague
  • apologetic — If you are apologetic, you show or say that you are sorry for causing trouble for someone, for hurting them, or for disappointing them.
  • apophthegm — a short cryptic remark containing some general or generally accepted truth; maxim
  • appetising — (mostly, British) alternative spelling of appetizing.
  • appetizing — Appetizing food looks and smells good, so that you want to eat it.
  • apterygial — (of eels, certain insects, etc) lacking such paired limbs as wings or fins
  • apterygote — belonging or pertaining to the Apterygota, a subclass of primitive wingless insects that undergo little or no metamorphosis.
  • arbitraged — Simple past tense and past participle of arbitrage.
  • arbitrager — In finance, an arbitrager is someone who buys currencies, securities, or commodities on one country's market in order to make money by immediately selling them at a profit on another country's market.
  • arbitrages — Plural form of arbitrage.
  • arctangent — the function the value of which for a given argument is the angle in radians (between –π/2 and π/2) the tangent of which is that argument: the inverse of the tangent function
  • arctogaean — of or relating to Arctogaea
  • areopagite — a member of the Areopagus, a judicial council of ancient Athens that met on the hill of that name
  • argenteous — silvery.
  • argenteuil — a suburb of Paris, France, with a convent (656) that became famous when Héloïse was abbess (12th century). Pop: 103 250 (2008)
  • argumental — That is based on arguments. Pertaining to arguments.
  • argumentum — an argument
  • arguteness — acuteness of mind
  • argyrodite — a rare mineral, Ag8GeS6, that contains silver, germanium, and sulphur
  • arpeggiate — to play an arpeggio
  • arrangment — Misspelling of arrangement.
  • arrogative — Making undue claims and pretensions; prone to arrogance.
  • asperating — to make rough, harsh, or uneven: a voice asperated by violent emotion.
  • assignment — An assignment is a task or piece of work that you are given to do, especially as part of your job or studies.
  • astringent — An astringent is a liquid that you put on your skin to make it less oily or to make cuts stop bleeding.
  • astrologer — An astrologer is a person who uses astrology to try to tell you things about your character and your future.
  • at a guess — You say at a guess to indicate that what you are saying is only an estimate or what you believe to be true, rather than being a definite fact.
  • atomic age — the period characterized by the use of atomic energy: regarded as beginning with the creation of the first self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction on December 2, 1942
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