7-letter words containing ge
- dingers — Plural form of dinger.
- discage — to release (an animal or bird) from a cage
- disedge — to render (an object) blunt
- disgest — Obsolete form of digest.
- diverge — to move, lie, or extend in different directions from a common point; branch off.
- divulge — to disclose or reveal (something private, secret, or previously unknown).
- dockage — a curtailment; deduction, as from wages.
- dodgems — Plural form of dodgem.
- dodgers — a person who dodges.
- dodgery — the use of a dodge or dodges; trickery; duplicity.
- dogeate — office of doge
- dogedom — the domain of a doge
- doggers — Plural form of dogger.
- doggery — doglike behavior or conduct, especially when surly.
- doggess — a female dog
- dosages — the administration of medicine in doses.
- dowager — a woman who holds some title or property from her deceased husband, especially the widow of a king, duke, etc. (often used as an additional title to differentiate her from the wife of the present king, duke, etc.): a queen dowager; an empress dowager.
- dragees — a sugarcoated nut or candy.
- dragged — to draw with force, effort, or difficulty; pull heavily or slowly along; haul; trail: They dragged the carpet out of the house.
- dragger — any of various small motor trawlers operating off the North Atlantic coast of the U.S.
- drayage — conveyance by dray.
- dredged — Simple past tense and past participle of dredge.
- dredger — a container with a perforated top for sprinkling flour, sugar, etc., on food for cooking.
- dredges — Plural form of dredge.
- drivage — a horizontal or inclined heading or roadway in the process of construction.
- drudged — Simple past tense and past participle of drudge.
- drudger — One who drudges; a drudge.
- drudges — a person who does menial, distasteful, dull, or hard work.
- drugged — Pharmacology. a chemical substance used in the treatment, cure, prevention, or diagnosis of disease or used to otherwise enhance physical or mental well-being.
- drugger — a person who administers drugs
- drugget — Also called India drugget. a rug from India of coarse hair with cotton or jute.
- dudgeon — a kind of wood used especially for the handles of knives, daggers, etc.
- dugento — duecento.
- dungeon — Zork
- dunnage — baggage or personal effects.
- eagerly — keen or ardent in desire or feeling; impatiently longing: I am eager for news about them. He is eager to sing.
- ecotage — sabotage aimed at polluters or destroyers of the natural environment.
- edge in — a line or border at which a surface terminates: Grass grew along the edges of the road. The paper had deckle edges.
- edgeway — A form of railway in which the road is causewayed up to the level of the top of the flanges.
- effulge — to radiate or shine
- egested — to discharge, as from the body; void (opposed to ingest).
- emerged — Move out of or away from something and come into view.
- emerges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of emerge.
- encaged — Simple past tense and past participle of encage.
- endogen — monocotyledon
- engaged — Busy; occupied.
- engagee — (of a female artist) morally or politically committed to some ideology
- engager — One who, or that which, engages.
- engages — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of engage.
- engorge — Cause to swell with blood, water, or another fluid.