7-letter words containing ge
- ambages — winding, roundabout paths or ways.
- amenage — to tame or domesticate
- anagoge — allegorical or spiritual interpretation, esp of sacred works such as the Bible
- angeled — one of a class of spiritual beings; a celestial attendant of God. In medieval angelology, angels constituted the lowest of the nine celestial orders (seraphim, cherubim, thrones, dominations or dominions, virtues, powers, principalities or princedoms, archangels, and angels).
- angeles — city in WC Luzon, the Philippines: pop. 236,000
- angelic — You can describe someone as angelic if they are, or seem to be, very good, kind, and gentle.
- angelle — It means angel/a messenger.
- angelou — Maya, real name Marguerite Johnson. 1928–2014, US Black novelist, poet, and dramatist. Her works include the autobiographical novel I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1970) and its sequels
- angelus — a series of prayers recited in the morning, at midday, and in the evening, commemorating the Annunciation and Incarnation
- angered — a strong feeling of displeasure and belligerence aroused by a wrong; wrath; ire.
- angerly — angrily
- angevin — a native or inhabitant of Anjou
- anlagen — Embryology. an embryonic area capable of forming a structure: the primordium, germ, or bud.
- antigen — An antigen is a substance that helps the production of antibodies.
- apagoge — an indirect argument which serves to prove something by showing the contrary to be absurd or impossible
- apanage — appanage
- apogean — Connected with the apogee.
- apogees — Plural form of apogee.
- apogeic — of or relating to an apogee
- armiger — a person entitled to bear heraldic arms, such as a sovereign or nobleman
- arrange — If you arrange an event or meeting, you make plans for it to happen.
- arriage — an office or duty carried out by tenants for their feudal lord or superior
- asperge — an implement used for scattering holy water
- assange — Julian (Paul). born 1971, Australian editor of WikiLeaks, a website that published (2010) thousands of leaked US diplomatic and military documents
- assiege — a besiegement
- assuage — If you assuage an unpleasant feeling that someone has, you make them feel it less strongly.
- asswage — Obsolete spelling of assuage.
- auberge — an inn or tavern
- avenage — (obsolete, legal) A quantity of oats paid by a tenant to a landlord in lieu of rent.
- avenged — Simple past tense and past participle of avenge.
- avenger — to take vengeance or exact satisfaction for: to avenge a grave insult.
- avenges — Plural form of avenge.
- average — An average is the result that you get when you add two or more numbers together and divide the total by the number of numbers you added together.
- babbage — Charles 1792–1871, English mathematician and inventor, who built a calculating machine that anticipated the modern electronic computer
- badgers — Plural form of badger.
- bagehot — Walter. 1826–77, English economist and journalist: editor of The Economist; author of The English Constitution (1867), Physics and Politics (1872), and Lombard Street (1873)
- baggage — Your baggage consists of the bags that you take with you when you travel.
- baggers — Plural form of bagger.
- bandage — A bandage is a long strip of cloth which is wrapped around a wounded part of someone's body to protect or support it.
- bangers — A sausage.
- barrage — A barrage is continuous firing on an area with large guns and tanks.
- beerage — the beer brewing industry
- bergere — type of French armchair
- besiege — If you are besieged by people, many people want something from you and continually bother you.
- bigener — a hybrid between individuals of different genera
- biggest — large, as in size, height, width, or amount: a big house; a big quantity.
- biggety — conceited or self-important.
- biogeny — the evolutionary history of living organisms
- blagger — informal conversation in a public place, often deceitful.
- blinger — expensive and flashy jewelry, clothing, or other possessions.