9-letter words containing t, g, s, i
- reichstag — the lower house of the parliament during the period of the Second Reich and the Weimar Republic.
- resenting — to feel or show displeasure or indignation at (a person, act, remark, etc.) from a sense of injury or insult.
- resetting — to set again: to reset an alarm clock; to reset a broken bone.
- resighted — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
- resisting — to withstand, strive against, or oppose: to resist infection; to resist temptation.
- resorting — to sort or arrange (cards, papers, etc.) again.
- restaging — a single step or degree in a process; a particular phase, period, position, etc., in a process, development, or series.
- restating — to state again or in a new way.
- restringe — to restrict, contract, or confine
- resulting — to spring, arise, or proceed as a consequence of actions, circumstances, premises, etc.; be the outcome.
- righteous — characterized by uprightness or morality: a righteous observance of the law.
- rightless — lacking rights
- rightmost — farthest to the right side
- rightness — correctness or accuracy.
- rightsize — to adjust to an appropriate size: Layoffs will be necessary to rightsize our workforce.
- ring spot — any of various plant diseases caused by a virus or fungus and characterized by concentric rings of discoloration or necrosis on the leaves.
- ringstand — a stand on which laboratory equipment is placed
- rogations — solemn supplications, esp in a form of ceremony prescribed by the Church
- root sign — the symbol √ placed before a number or quantity to indicate the extraction of a root, esp a square root. The value of a higher root is indicated by a raised digit in front of the symbol, as in 3√
- rosetting — abnormal leaf formation in a plant due to disease
- rushlight — a narrow candle, formerly in use, made of the pith of various types of rush dipped in tallow
- safelight — a darkroom light with a filter that transmits only those rays of the spectrum to which films, printing paper, etc., are not sensitive.
- sagenitic — relating to sagenite
- sagittary — a centaur with a bow, as Chiron.
- sagittate — shaped like an arrowhead.
- saintling — a little saint
- sao tiago — the largest of the Cape Verde Islands, S of Cape Verde. About 383 sq. mi. (992 sq. km).
- satiating — to supply with anything to excess, so as to disgust or weary; surfeit.
- scantling — a timber of relatively slight width and thickness, as a stud or rafter in a house frame.
- scotching — scutch (defs 2, 4).
- scripting — the letters or characters used in writing by hand; handwriting, especially cursive writing.
- scuttling — to run with quick, hasty steps; scurry.
- se'nnight — a week.
- sea fight — a fight between ships at sea.
- secreting — to place out of sight; hide; conceal: squirrels secreting nuts in a hollow tree trunk.
- selecting — to choose in preference to another or others; pick out.
- serengeti — a plain in NW Tanzania, including a major wildlife reserve (Serengeti National Park)
- serrating — Chiefly Biology. notched on the edge like a saw: a serrate leaf.
- settlings — the act of a person or thing that settles.
- sgraffito — a technique of ornamentation in which a surface layer of paint, plaster, slip, etc., is incised to reveal a ground of contrasting color.
- sheathing — the act of a person who sheathes.
- shuttling — a device in a loom for passing or shooting the weft thread through the shed from one side of the web to the other, usually consisting of a boat-shaped piece of wood containing a bobbin on which the weft thread is wound.
- sidelight — an item of incidental information.
- siftingly — by a sifting process
- sight gag — a comic effect produced by visual means rather than by spoken lines, as in a play or motion picture.
- sighthole — a hole, as on a quadrant, through which to see or to sight.
- sightless — unable to see; blind.
- sightline — any of the lines of sight between the spectators and the stage or playing area in a theater, stadium, etc.: Some of the sightlines are blocked by columns.
- sightseer — to go about seeing places and things of interest: In Rome, we only had two days to sightsee.
- sightsman — a tourist guide