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7-letter words containing ge

  • blogger — a website containing a writer's or group of writers' own experiences, observations, opinions, etc., and often having images and links to other websites.
  • bludger — a person who scrounges
  • blunger — a large vat in which the contents, esp clay and water, are mixed by rotating arms
  • boatage — the act of hauling by boat.
  • bondage — Bondage is the condition of being someone's property and having to work for them.
  • bonynge — Richard. born 1930, Australian conductor, esp of opera
  • boscage — a mass of trees and shrubs; thicket
  • boskage — a mass of trees or shrubs; wood, grove, or thicket.
  • bossage — stonework blocked out for later carving.
  • bottger — Johann Friedrich [yoh-hahn free-drikh] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1682–1719, German chemist.
  • bourges — a city in central France. Pop: 72 480 (1999)
  • bourget — a suburb of Paris: former airport, landing site for Charles A. Lindbergh, May 1927.
  • bragged — to use boastful language; boast: He bragged endlessly about his high score.
  • bragger — a person who brags.
  • breenge — to lunge forward; move violently or dash
  • bregenz — a resort in W Austria, the capital of Vorarlberg province. Pop: 26 752 (2001)
  • brewage — a product of brewing; brew
  • bridgerJames, 1804–81, U.S. fur trader and mountain man, noted for his tall tales.
  • bridges — Robert (Seymour). 1844–1930, English poet: poet laureate (1913–30)
  • bridget — 453–523 ad, Irish abbess; a patron saint of Ireland. Feast day: Feb 1
  • bringer — A bringer of something is someone who brings or provides it.
  • brokage — brokerage.
  • bruegel — Jan (jɑn ) ; yän) 1568-1625; Fl. painter: son of Pieter
  • bugeyed — with bulging eyes, as from surprise or wonderment; astonished.
  • buggery — Buggery is anal intercourse.
  • bulkage — any agent that aids peristalsis by increasing the bulk of material in the intestine
  • bungest — out of order; broken; unusable.
  • buoyage — a system of buoys
  • burbage — James. ?1530–97, English actor and theatre manager, who built (1576) the first theatre in England
  • burgage — (in England) tenure of land or tenement in a town or city, which originally involved a fixed money rent
  • burgeon — If something burgeons, it grows or develops rapidly.
  • burgess — a citizen or freeman of a borough
  • c geleeClaude [klohd] /kloʊd/ (Show IPA), Lorraine, Claude.
  • cabbage — A cabbage is a round vegetable with white, green or purple leaves that is usually eaten cooked.
  • cadgers — Plural form of cadger.
  • cageful — an amount which fills a cage to capacity
  • cakeage — a charge levied in a restaurant for serving cake (such as a birthday cake) brought in from outside the premises
  • carbage — snack food that is of limited nutritional value but low in carbohydrates
  • carnage — Carnage is the violent killing of large numbers of people, especially in a war.
  • cartage — the process or cost of carting
  • centage — the rate per hundred of something
  • changed — Simple past tense and past participle of change.
  • changer — a person or thing that changes something
  • changes — to make the form, nature, content, future course, etc., of (something) different from what it is or from what it would be if left alone: to change one's name; to change one's opinion; to change the course of history.
  • charged — If a situation is charged, it is filled with emotion and therefore very tense or exciting.
  • charger — A charger is a device used for charging or recharging batteries.
  • charges — Plural form of charge.
  • chaunge — Obsolete form of change.
  • chigger — the parasitic larva of any of various free-living mites of the family Trombidiidae, which causes intense itching of human skin
  • chugged — a large gulp or swallow: He finished his beer in two chugs.
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