7-letter words containing y, g
- quayage — quays collectively.
- raggedy — ragged.
- raggery — rags
- ray gun — a gun that can fire bursts of usually destructive or lethal rays: a science fiction novel whose hero has a ray gun made of gold.
- redying — a coloring material or matter.
- regally — of or relating to a king; royal: the regal power.
- regency — the office, jurisdiction, or control of a regent or body of regents exercising the ruling power during the minority, absence, or disability of a sovereign.
- relying — to depend confidently; put trust in (usually followed by on or upon): You can rely on her work.
- rhyming — identity in sound of some part, especially the end, of words or lines of verse.
- ridgway — Matthew Bunker, 1895–1993, U.S. army general: chief of staff 1953–55.
- rightly — in accordance with truth or fact; correctly: to see rightly; to understand rightly.
- rigidly — stiff or unyielding; not pliant or flexible; hard: a rigid strip of metal.
- roguery — roguish conduct; rascality.
- roughly — having a coarse or uneven surface, as from projections, irregularities, or breaks; not smooth: rough, red hands; a rough road.
- rya rug — a decorative hand-woven area rug or tapestry of Scandinavian origin, with a thick pile and, usually, an abstract design
- rydberg — a unit of energy used in atomic physics, equal to 13.606 electron-volts. Abbreviation: ry.
- sagathy — a type of light, woollen fabric
- savigny — Friedrich Karl von (ˈfridrɪç ˈkɑl fɔn). 1779–1861, German legal scholar, who pioneered the historical approach to jurisprudence, emphasizing custom and precedent
- sayings — something said, especially a proverb or apothegm.
- scraggy — lean or thin; scrawny.
- scroggy — any naturally short or stunted tree or bush, as a crab apple tree or blackthorn bush.
- scrying — to use divination to discover hidden knowledge or future events, especially by means of a crystal ball.
- shingly — consisting of or covered with shingle.
- shoggly — unsteady; shaky
- sightly — pleasing to the sight; attractive; comely.
- signary — a set of symbols, such as an alphabet
- signify — to make known by signs, speech, or action.
- signory — seigniory.
- skagway — a town in SE Alaska, near the famous White and Chilkoot passes to the Klondike gold fields: railway terminus.
- slaying — A slaying is a murder.
- sloughy — the outer layer of the skin of a snake, which is cast off periodically.
- spangly — Spangly clothes are decorated with a lot of small shiny objects.
- splurgy — ostentatious
- spriggy — possessing sprigs or small branches.
- springy — characterized by spring or elasticity; flexible; resilient: He walks with a springy step.
- squidgy — Something that is squidgy is soft and can be squashed easily.
- stagery — theatrical effects or techniques, or the arrangement of a production on stage
- staying — (of a ship) to change to the other tack.
- stringy — resembling a string or strings; consisting of strings or stringlike pieces: stringy weeds; a stringy fiber.
- stygian — of or relating to the river Styx or to Hades.
- styling — a particular kind, sort, or type, as with reference to form, appearance, or character: the baroque style; The style of the house was too austere for their liking.
- surgery — the art, practice, or work of treating diseases, injuries, or deformities by manual or operative procedures.
- swingby — act of spacecraft passing close to planet
- sylloge — a collection or summary
- syncing — synchronization: The picture and the soundtrack were out of sync.
- synergy — the interaction of elements that when combined produce a total effect that is greater than the sum of the individual elements, contributions, etc.; synergism.
- syngamy — union of gametes, as in fertilization or conjugation; sexual reproduction.
- syntagm — an element that enters into a syntagmatic relationship.
- syringa — mock orange (def 1).
- syringe — a small device consisting of a glass, metal, or hard rubber tube, narrowed at its outlet, and fitted with either a piston or a rubber bulb for drawing in a quantity of fluid or for ejecting fluid in a stream, for cleaning wounds, injecting fluids into the body, etc.