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7-letter words containing gin

  • nudging — to annoy with persistent complaints, criticisms, or pleas; nag: He was always nudging his son to move to a better neighborhood.
  • origins — Plural form of origin.
  • paginal — of or relating to pages.
  • parging — a thin coat of plaster or mortar for giving a relatively smooth surface to rough masonry or for sealing it against moisture.
  • pegging — a pin of wood or other material driven or fitted into something, as to fasten parts together, to hang things on, to make fast a rope or string on, to stop a hole, or to mark some point.
  • pinging — ping
  • ponging — an unpleasant smell; stink.
  • pugging — Also called pugmark. a footprint, especially of a game animal.
  • purging — to rid of whatever is impure or undesirable; cleanse; purify.
  • ragging — a musical composition in ragtime: a piano rag.
  • ranging — the extent to which or the limits between which variation is possible: the range of steel prices; a wide range of styles.
  • reginal — queen.
  • ridging — a long, narrow elevation of land; a chain of hills or mountains.
  • rigging — the arrangement of the masts, spars, sails, etc., on a boat or ship.
  • ringing — a ringing sound, as of a bell or bells: the ring of sleigh bells.
  • rouging — any of various red cosmetics for coloring the cheeks or lips.
  • rugging — a bulky, coarse fabric with a full nap, used as a floor covering.
  • sagging — to sink or bend downward by weight or pressure, especially in the middle: The roof sags.
  • saginaw — a port in E Michigan, on the Saginaw River.
  • serging — the method of overcasting the edges of a piece of fabric to prevent fraying
  • sieging — the act or process of surrounding and attacking a fortified place in such a way as to isolate it from help and supplies, for the purpose of lessening the resistance of the defenders and thereby making capture possible.
  • singing — to utter words or sounds in succession with musical modulations of the voice; vocalize melodically.
  • spongin — a scleroprotein occurring in the form of fibers that form the skeleton of certain sponges.
  • staging — a single step or degree in a process; a particular phase, period, position, etc., in a process, development, or series.
  • sugging — the practice of selling products under the pretence of conducting market research
  • surging — a strong, wavelike, forward movement, rush, or sweep: the onward surge of an angry mob.
  • swaging — a tool for bending cold metal to a required shape.
  • tagging — a children's game in which one player chases the others in an effort to touch one of them, who then takes the role of pursuer.
  • tugging — to pull at with force, vigor, or effort.
  • vaginae — Anatomy, Zoology. the passage leading from the uterus to the vulva in certain female mammals. Compare oviduct. a sheathlike part or organ.
  • vaginal — Anatomy, Zoology. pertaining to or involving the vagina.
  • vagino- — vagina
  • verging — the edge, rim, or margin of something: the verge of a desert; to operate on the verge of fraud.
  • wagging — to move from side to side, forward and backward, or up and down, especially rapidly and repeatedly: a dog wagging its tail.
  • wanging — Present participle of wang.
  • wedging — a piece of hard material with two principal faces meeting in a sharply acute angle, for raising, holding, or splitting objects by applying a pounding or driving force, as from a hammer. Compare machine (def 3b).
  • wigging — an artificial covering of hair for all or most of the head, of either synthetic or natural hair, worn to be stylish or more attractive.
  • wiggins — Sir Bradley (Marc). born 1980, English racing cyclist; winner of five Olympic gold medals for Britain; first British cyclist (2012) to win the Tour de France
  • winging — either of the two forelimbs of most birds and of bats, corresponding to the human arms, that are specialized for flight.
  • yoginis — Plural form of yogini.
  • zagging — Present participle of zag.
  • zigging — Present participle of zig.
  • zinging — vitality, animation, or zest.
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