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9-letter words containing dg

  • abridging — to shorten by omissions while retaining the basic contents: to abridge a reference book.
  • adjudging — Present participle of adjudge.
  • badgeless — without a badge
  • badgering — any of various burrowing, carnivorous mammals of the family Mustelidae, as Taxidea taxus, of North America, and Meles meles, of Europe and Asia.
  • banbridge — a district in S Northern Ireland, in Co Down. Pop: 43 083 (2003 est). Area: 442 sq km (170 sq miles)
  • begrudged — to envy or resent the pleasure or good fortune of (someone): She begrudged her friend the award.
  • begrudger — a dissatisfied person
  • beveridge — William Henry, 1st Baron Beveridge. 1879–1963, British economist, whose Report on Social Insurance and Allied Services (1942) formed the basis of social-security legislation in Britain
  • bloodgate — an incident during the 2010 Heineken Cup quarter-final in which winger Tom Williams faked a bleeding mouth injury to create a substitution opportunity for his team, the Harlequins
  • bridgeman — a person who works on a bridge or on the construction of bridges.
  • bridgeton — a city in SW New Jersey.
  • browridge — the ridge of bone over the eye sockets
  • budgetary — A budgetary matter or policy is concerned with the amount of money that is available to a country or organization, and how it is to be spent.
  • budgeteer — a person who makes a budget, esp in politics or business
  • budgeting — financial planning
  • bydgoszcz — an industrial city and port in N Poland: under Prussian rule from 1772 to 1919. Pop: 579 000 (2005 est)
  • cambridge — city in E Mass., across the Charles River from Boston: pop. 101,000
  • cartridge — A cartridge is a metal or cardboard tube containing a bullet and an explosive substance. Cartridges are used in guns.
  • coleridge — Samuel Taylor. 1772–1834, English Romantic poet and critic, noted for poems such as The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1798), Kubla Khan (1816), and Christabel (1816), and for his critical work Biographia Literaria (1817)
  • cordgrass — a coarse perennial grass of the genus Spartina, characteristically growing in mud or marsh
  • cudgeling — a short, thick stick used as a weapon; club.
  • cudgelled — a short, thick stick used as a weapon; club.
  • dadgummit — (US, euphemistic) goddammit.
  • dislodged — Simple past tense and past participle of dislodge.
  • dislodges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dislodge.
  • dodgeball — a circle game in which players throw an inflated ball at opponents within the circle who try to avoid being hit, and therefore eliminated, the winner being the one who remains unhit.
  • dodginess — (uncountable) The condition of being dodgy.
  • dredge up — Also called dredging machine. any of various powerful machines for dredging up or removing earth, as from the bottom of a river, by means of a scoop, a series of buckets, a suction pipe, or the like.
  • edge city — an area on the outskirts of a city having a high density of office buildings, shopping malls, hotels, etc.
  • edge tool — a tool with a cutting edge.
  • edge wave — a wave aligned at right angles to the shoreline.
  • edgeworthMaria, 1767–1849, English novelist.
  • feedgrain — any cereal grain used as a feed for livestock, poultry, or other animals.
  • fidgeting — to move about restlessly, nervously, or impatiently.
  • fidgetted — Simple past tense and past participle of fidget.
  • fieldgate — the site in an oil field where natural gas is separated from crude oil after the latter reaches the surface, for movement through pipelines.
  • fledgling — a young bird just fledged.
  • floodgate — Civil Engineering. a gate designed to regulate the flow of water.
  • flybridge — flying bridge.
  • foodgrain — Cereal (grain grown as human food).
  • fore edge — the front outer edge of a book, opposite the bound edge.
  • fore-edge — the front outer edge of a book, opposite the bound edge.
  • forejudge — forjudge.
  • gadgeteer — a person who invents or is particularly fond of using gadgets.
  • grandgentCharles Hall, 1862–1939, U.S. philologist and essayist.
  • grudgeful — Full of grudge; envious.
  • handgrips — Plural form of handgrip.
  • handguard — A guard on the front of a weapon for hand and finger protection, or to allow for attachments to the weapon.
  • hard-edge — of, relating to, or characteristic of a style of abstract painting associated with the 1960s and marked chiefly by sharply outlined geometric or nongeometric forms.
  • hardgoods — durable goods, such as automobiles, furniture, etc.

On this page, we collect all 9-letter words with DG. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 9-letter word that contains DG to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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