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7-letter words containing w, i, g

  • gwalior — a former state in central India, now part of Madhya Pradesh.
  • gwyniad — A freshwater fish native to Bala Lake in Wales.
  • hawking — to make an effort to raise phlegm from the throat; clear the throat noisily.
  • highway — a main road, especially one between towns or cities: the highway between Los Angeles and Seattle.
  • howling — producing or uttering a howling noise: a howling mob.
  • ingelowJean, 1820–97, English poet and novelist.
  • ingrown — having grown into the flesh: an ingrown toenail.
  • inswing — (cricket) The swing of a ball through the air in a direction towards the batsman.
  • jigsaws — Plural form of jigsaw.
  • knawing — Present participle of knaw.
  • knowing — affecting, implying, or deliberately revealing shrewd knowledge of secret or private information: a knowing glance.
  • kwangsi — Guangxi
  • lapwing — a large Old World plover, Vanellus vanellus, having a long, slender, upcurved crest, an erratic, flapping flight, and a shrill cry.
  • mawning — Eye dialect of morning, representing non-rhotic.
  • mcgwireMark David, born 1963, U.S. baseball player.
  • meawing — Present participle of meaw.
  • meowing — Present participle of meow.
  • mewling — to cry, as a baby, young child, or the like; whimper.
  • misgrow — (ambitransitive) To grow incorrectly or amiss.
  • ml-twig — A variant of TWIG in SML, by Jussi Rintanen <[email protected]>, which comes with SML/NJ.
  • newling — One who is new (to something); a newcomer; a novice; a newbie.
  • outwing — to fly faster or more skilfully than
  • pawning — to deposit as security, as for money borrowed, especially with a pawnbroker: He raised the money by pawning his watch.
  • periwig — a wig, especially a peruke.
  • pigwash — slops used to feed pigs
  • pigweed — any goosefoot of the genus Chenopodium, especially C. album.
  • plowing — an agricultural implement used for cutting, lifting, turning over, and partly pulverizing soil.
  • redwing — a European thrush, Turdus iliacus, having chestnut-red flank and axillary feathers.
  • reweigh — to weigh (an object or quantity) again
  • ridgwayMatthew Bunker, 1895–1993, U.S. army general: chief of staff 1953–55.
  • ringtaw — a game of marbles in which players attempt to knock other players' marbles out of a ring
  • rowling — J(oanne) K(athleen) born 1965, English author of children's books.
  • saginaw — a port in E Michigan, on the Saginaw River.
  • scowing — any of various vessels having a flat-bottomed rectangular hull with sloping ends, built in various sizes with or without means of propulsion, as barges, punts, rowboats, or sailboats.
  • seewing — prosecution
  • showing — a theatrical production, performance, or company.
  • skewing — an oblique movement, direction, or position.
  • snowing — Meteorology. a precipitation in the form of ice crystals, mainly of intricately branched, hexagonal form and often agglomerated into snowflakes, formed directly from the freezing of the water vapor in the air. Compare ice crystals, snow grains, snow pellets.
  • stewing — to cook (food) by simmering or slow boiling.
  • stowing — Nautical. to put (cargo, provisions, etc.) in the places intended for them. to put (sails, spars, gear, etc.) in the proper place or condition when not in use.
  • swaging — a tool for bending cold metal to a required shape.
  • swigger — an amount of liquid, especially liquor, taken in one swallow; draught: He took a swig from the flask.
  • swingby — act of spacecraft passing close to planet
  • swinged — to singe.
  • swinger — a person or thing that swings.
  • swingle — a single person who is highly active socially and sexually; an unmarried person who swings.
  • swiping — a strong, sweeping blow, as with a cricket bat or golf club.
  • thawing — the act or state of thawing or melting
  • twigged — to look at; observe: Now, twig the man climbing there, will you?
  • twiggen — made of twigs
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