6-letter words containing ge
- cledge — (mining) The upper stratum of fuller's earth.
- cludge — (slang, UK dialectal) A toilet.
- clunge — (UK, vulgar, slang, mostly, internet) vagina.
- codger — Old codger is a disrespectful way of referring to an old man.
- codges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of codge.
- cogent — A cogent reason, argument, or example is strong and convincing.
- cogged — having cogs.
- cogger — a deceiver
- congee — a gruel of boiled rice and water
- conger — A conger or a conger eel is a large fish that looks like a snake.
- cowage — a tropical climbing leguminous plant, Stizolobium (or Mucuna) pruriens, whose bristly pods cause severe itching and stinging
- cringe — If you cringe at something, you feel embarrassed or disgusted, and perhaps show this feeling in your expression or by making a slight movement.
- cubage — cubic content or volume
- cudgel — A cudgel is a thick, short stick that is used as a weapon.
- dagged — one of a series of decorative scallops or foliations along the edge of a garment, cloth, etc.
- dagger — A dagger is a weapon like a knife with two sharp edges.
- damage — To damage an object means to break it, spoil it physically, or stop it from working properly.
- danged — damn (used euphemistically).
- danger — Danger is the possibility that someone may be harmed or killed.
- degage — unconstrained in manner
- degerm — to remove the germ from (wheat)
- deluge — A deluge of things is a large number of them which arrive or happen at the same time.
- digest — to convert (food) in the alimentary canal into absorbable form for assimilation into the system.
- digged — a simple past tense of dig1 .
- digger — a person or an animal that digs.
- dinged — to cause surface damage to; dent: Flying gravel had dinged the car's fenders.
- dinger — humdinger.
- dinges — the condition of being dingy.
- dingey — Alternative spelling of dinghy.
- dirges — Plural form of dirge.
- dodged — to elude or evade by a sudden shift of position or by strategy: to dodge a blow; to dodge a question.
- dodgem — an attraction at amusement parks, carnivals, or the like, consisting of small electrically powered automobiles that the patrons drive, trying to bump other cars while avoiding being bumped by them.
- dodger — a person who dodges.
- dodges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dodge.
- dogear — A corner of a page in a book that has been folded down, usually to mark a place in the book.
- dogged — doggoned; damned; confounded: Well, I'll be dogged!
- dogger — an assistant at a drawbench.
- donage — Misspelling of dunnage.
- donged — Simple past tense and past participle of dong.
- dongen — Kees van [keys-van;; Dutch keys-vahn] /keɪs væn;; Dutch keɪs vɑn/ (Show IPA), van Dongen, Kees.
- dosage — the administration of medicine in doses.
- dotage — a decline of mental faculties, especially as associated with old age; senility.
- dradge — (mineralogy) Inferior ore, separated from the better ore by cobbing.
- dragee — a sugarcoated nut or candy.
- dragge — Obsolete spelling of drag.
- dredge — 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.
- droger — a long-masted boat used in the West Indies
- drudge — a person who does menial, distasteful, dull, or hard work.
- dunged — Simple past tense and past participle of dung.
- dunger — an old decrepit car