6-letter words containing ge
- barege — light silky gauze fabric made of wool
- barged — a capacious, flat-bottomed vessel, usually intended to be pushed or towed, for transporting freight or passengers; lighter.
- bargee — a person employed on or in charge of a barge
- barger — (obsolete) The manager of a barge.
- barges — Plural form of barge.
- begets — (especially of a male parent) to procreate or generate (offspring).
- begged — to ask for as a gift, as charity, or as a favor: to beg alms; to beg forgiveness.
- beiger — very light brown, as of undyed wool; light gray with a brownish tinge.
- bergen — a large rucksack with a capacity of over 50 litres
- berger — Thomas, 1924–2014, U.S. novelist.
- bigeye — any tropical or subtropical red marine percoid fish of the family Priacanthidae, having very large eyes and rough scales
- bigger — large, as in size, height, width, or amount: a big house; a big quantity.
- bilges — Nautical. either of the rounded areas that form the transition between the bottom and the sides on the exterior of a hull. Also, bilges. (in a hull with a double bottom) an enclosed area between frames at each side of the floors, where seepage collects. Also called bilge well. a well into which seepage drains to be pumped away. Also called bilge water. seepage accumulated in bilges.
- bingen — a town in W Germany on the Rhine: wine trade and tourist centre. Pop: 24 716 (2003 est)
- binger — a person addicted to crack cocaine
- biogen — a hypothetical protein assumed to be the basis of the formation and functioning of body cells and tissues
- bludge — to scrounge from (someone)
- blunge — to mix (clay or a similar substance) with water in order to form a suspension for use in ceramics
- bocage — the wooded countryside characteristic of northern France, with small irregular-shaped fields and many hedges and copses
- bodger — worthless or second-rate
- bogged — wet, spongy ground with soil composed mainly of decayed vegetable matter.
- bogger — a lavatory
- bolger — James. born 1935, New Zealand politician; prime minister (1990–97)
- booger — A booger is a piece of dried mucus that comes from inside your nose.
- borage — a European boraginaceous plant, Borago officinalis, with star-shaped blue flowers. The young leaves have a cucumber-like flavour and are sometimes used in salads or as seasoning
- borger — a city in N Texas.
- borges — Jorge Luis (ˈxorxe lwis). 1899–1986, Argentinian poet, short-story writer, and literary scholar. The short stories collected in Ficciones (1944) he described as "games with infinity"
- bouget — a representation of a water-carrying vessel consisting of a yoke with a bucket at either end
- bridge — A bridge is a structure that is built over a railway, river, or road so that people or vehicles can cross from one side to the other.
- bruges — a city in NW Belgium, capital of West Flanders province: centre of the medieval European wool and cloth trade. Pop: 117 025 (2004 est)
- brugge — city in NW Belgium: pop. 116,000
- budger — a person who budges or stirs
- budget — Your budget is the amount of money that you have available to spend. The budget for something is the amount of money that a person, organization, or country has available to spend on it.
- bugeye — a ketch-rigged sailing vessel used on Chesapeake Bay.
- bugged — Also called true bug, hemipteran, hemipteron. a hemipterous insect.
- bugger — Some people use bugger to describe a person who has done something annoying or stupid.
- bulged — a rounded projection, bend, or protruding part; protuberance; hump: a bulge in a wall.
- bulger — a thing which bulges
- bunged — a stopper for the opening of a cask.
- bungee — a type of stretchy rope consisting of elastic strands often in a fabric casing
- bunger — a firework
- burgee — a triangular or swallow-tailed flag flown from the mast of a merchant ship for identification and from the mast of a yacht to indicate its owner's membership of a particular yacht club
- burger — A burger is a flat round mass of minced meat or vegetables, which is fried and often eaten in a bread roll.
- cadged — Simple past tense and past participle of cadge.
- cadger — a person who cadges
- cagers — Plural form of cager.
- cépage — the grape variety used to make a particular wine
- change — If there is a change in something, it becomes different.
- charge — If you charge someone an amount of money, you ask them to pay that amount for something that you have sold to them or done for them.
- cierge — A wax candle used in religious rites.