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10-letter words containing t, g, r

  • regretting — to feel sorrow or remorse for (an act, fault, disappointment, etc.): He no sooner spoke than he regretted it.
  • reguardant — (of a beast) looking backward: a stag regardant.
  • regularity — usual; normal; customary: to put something in its regular place.
  • regulation — a law, rule, or other order prescribed by authority, especially to regulate conduct.
  • regulative — to control or direct by a rule, principle, method, etc.: to regulate household expenses.
  • regulatory — to control or direct by a rule, principle, method, etc.: to regulate household expenses.
  • reigniting — to set on fire; kindle.
  • reignition — the act or fact of igniting; state of being ignited.
  • reknitting — the method of repairing holes or runs in knitted garments
  • reknotting — the craft of repairing knots, esp in a carpet or jewellery
  • relegation — to send or consign to an inferior position, place, or condition: He has been relegated to a post at the fringes of the diplomatic service.
  • relitigate — to make the subject of a lawsuit; contest at law.
  • remigation — the act of rowing
  • remortgage — a conveyance of an interest in property as security for the repayment of money borrowed.
  • renegation — the act of denying: He shook his head in negation of the charge.
  • repaginate — 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.
  • repentigny — a town in S Quebec, in E Canada: suburb of Montreal.
  • replanting — to plant again.
  • replotting — a secret plan or scheme to accomplish some purpose, especially a hostile, unlawful, or evil purpose: a plot to overthrow the government.
  • repointing — the act or process of repairing the joints of (brickwork, masonry, etc) with mortar or cement
  • requesting — the act of asking for something to be given or done, especially as a favor or courtesy; solicitation or petition: At his request, they left.
  • reregister — a book in which records of acts, events, names, etc., are kept.
  • reregulate — to regulate again or anew
  • res gestae — things done or accomplished; achievements
  • resighting — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
  • resignment — the act of resigning; resignation
  • resonating — to resound.
  • respecting — regarding; concerning.
  • reteaching — to impart knowledge of or skill in; give instruction in: She teaches mathematics. Synonyms: coach.
  • rethinking — the act of reconsidering.
  • retracking — a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
  • retraining — the process of teaching people, esp workers, new skills
  • retreating — the forced or strategic withdrawal of an army or an armed force before an enemy, or the withdrawing of a naval force from action.
  • retrieving — to recover or regain: to retrieve the stray ball.
  • retrograde — moving backward; having a backward motion or direction; retiring or retreating.
  • retrogress — to go backward into an earlier and usually worse condition: to retrogress to infantilism.
  • reutlingen — a city in Baden-Württemberg, SW Germany, on the Echaz River.
  • revegetate — to cause vegetation to grow again on: to revegetate eroded lands.
  • ridge tent — a tent in which the roof slopes down from a central ridgepole
  • ridge tile — any of the tiles used to cover the ridge of a roof
  • ridgecrest — a town in central California.
  • right away — in accordance with what is good, proper, or just: right conduct.
  • right bank — a part of Paris, France, on the N bank of the Seine.
  • right face — Military. a command, given to a soldier or soldiers at attention, to turn the body about toward the right so as to face in the opposite direction. the act of so turning in a prescribed military manner.
  • right join — outer join
  • right wing — members of a conservative or reactionary political party, or those opposing extensive political reform.
  • right-hand — on the right.
  • right-laid — noting a rope, strand, etc., laid in a right-handed, or clockwise, direction as one looks away along it (opposed to left-laid).
  • right-wing — members of a conservative or reactionary political party, or those opposing extensive political reform.
  • rightabout — the position assumed by turning about to the right so as to face in the opposite direction.
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