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5-letter words containing ge

  • dogge — Obsolete spelling of dog.
  • eager — keen or ardent in desire or feeling; impatiently longing: I am eager for news about them. He is eager to sing.
  • edged — having an edge or edges (often used in combination): dull-edged; a two-edged sword.
  • edger — a person who puts an edge, especially a finishing edge, on a garment, surface, lens, etc.
  • edges — Plural form of edge.
  • egest — to discharge, as from the body; void (opposed to ingest).
  • egged — the roundish reproductive body produced by the female of certain animals, as birds and most reptiles, consisting of an ovum and its envelope of albumen, jelly, membranes, egg case, or shell, according to species.
  • egger — tent caterpillar.
  • eigen — Manfred. born 1927, German physical chemist: shared the Nobel prize for chemistry (1967) for developing his relaxation technique for studying fast reactions
  • eiger — a mountain in central Switzerland, in the Bernese Alps. Height: 3970 m (13 025 ft)
  • étage — a floor in a multi-storey building
  • fadge — to agree
  • fidge — (obsolete, dialectal, Scotland) To fidget; jostle or shake.
  • fogey — fogy.
  • forge — to form by heating and hammering; beat into shape.
  • frege — (Friedrich Ludwig) Gottlob [gawt-lohp] /ˈgɔt loʊp/ (Show IPA), 1848–1925, German mathematician and logician.
  • fuage — fumage.
  • fudge — a small stereotype or a few lines of specially prepared type, bearing a newspaper bulletin, for replacing a detachable part of a page plate without the need to replate the entire page.
  • funge — (obsolete) A fungus.
  • gaged — a standard of measure or measurement.
  • gager — a person or thing that gauges.
  • gages — Plural form of gage.
  • gauge — to determine the exact dimensions, capacity, quantity, or force of; measure.
  • ge'ez — a Semitic language of ancient Ethiopia, now used only as the liturgical language of the Ethiopian Church.
  • geans — heart cherry.
  • geant — A simulation, tracking and drawing package for HEP.
  • gears — Plural form of gear.
  • geats — Plural form of geat.
  • geaux — (jocular) informal form of go.
  • geber — (Jabir ibn Hayyan) 8th-century a.d, Arab alchemist.
  • gebur — a tenant farmer
  • gecko — any of numerous small, mostly nocturnal tropical lizards of the family Gekkonidae, usually having toe pads that can cling to smooth surfaces: the largest species, Gekko gecko, is sometimes kept as a pet.
  • gecom — (language)   A language for the GE-255 series, like COBOL with some ALGOL features added, in use around 1964-5. GECOM included many of the early COBOL constructs including report writer and TABSOL (programming by truth table). Another (planned but unimplemented?) component was FRINGE.
  • gecos — GCOS
  • gee's — a radio navigational system by which a fix can be obtained by comparing the pulse repetition rates of high-frequency ground waves from two separate stations.
  • geeks — Plural form of geek.
  • geeky — a digital-technology expert or enthusiast (a term of pride as self-reference, but often used disparagingly by others).
  • geese — a plural of goose.
  • geest — an area of sandy heathland in N Germany and adjacent areas
  • gehryFrank (Ephraim Goldberg) born 1929, U.S. architect, born in Canada.
  • geist — Ghost, apparition.
  • gelds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of geld.
  • geleeClaude [klohd] /kloʊd/ (Show IPA), Lorraine, Claude.
  • gelid — very cold; icy.
  • gelly — Obsolete form of jelly.
  • gelts — Plural form of gelt.
  • gemel — a twin; one of a pair
  • gemma — a bud.
  • gemmy — having gems; set with gems.
  • gemot — (in Anglo-Saxon England) a legislative or judicial assembly.
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