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8-letter words containing gin

  • obliging — willing or eager to do favors, offer one's services, etc.; accommodating: The clerk was most obliging.
  • original — belonging or pertaining to the origin or beginning of something, or to a thing at its beginning: The book still has its original binding.
  • paginate — to indicate the sequence of pages in (a book, manuscript, etc.) by placing numbers or other characters on each leaf; to number the pages of.
  • perugino — (Pietro Vannucci) 1446–1524, Italian painter.
  • pink gin — a cocktail of gin and bitters usually made and served without ice.
  • pledging — a solemn promise or agreement to do or refrain from doing something: a pledge of aid; a pledge not to wage war.
  • plugging — a piece of wood or other material used to stop up a hole or aperture, to fill a gap, or to act as a wedge.
  • plunging — to cast or thrust forcibly or suddenly into something, as a liquid, a penetrable substance, a place, etc.; immerse; submerge: to plunge a dagger into one's heart.
  • proggins — a university proctor
  • ragingly — angry fury; violent anger (sometimes used in combination): a speech full of rage; incidents of road rage.
  • ravaging — to work havoc upon; damage or mar by ravages: a face ravaged by grief.
  • re-begin — to begin (something) again
  • reaginic — relating to or caused by a reagin, or functioning as a reagin
  • reengine — to equip with a new engine or engines, as an aircraft.
  • reginald — a male given name: from an Old English word meaning “counsel and rule.”.
  • remargin — to provide additional cash or collateral to a broker in order to keep secure stock bought on margin.
  • reneging — Cards. to play a card that is not of the suit led when one can follow suit; break a rule of play.
  • saginate — to fatten (livestock)
  • savaging — fierce, ferocious, or cruel; untamed: savage beasts.
  • scroggin — a tramper's home-made high-calorie sweetmeat
  • shogging — to shake; jolt.
  • slagging — Also called cinder. the more or less completely fused and vitrified matter separated during the reduction of a metal from its ore.
  • slanging — very informal usage in vocabulary and idiom that is characteristically more metaphorical, playful, elliptical, vivid, and ephemeral than ordinary language, as Hit the road.
  • sledging — the activity of travelling across snow on a sledge
  • slinging — a device for hurling stones or other missiles that consists, typically, of a short strap with a long string at each end and that is operated by placing the missile in the strap, and, holding the ends of the strings in one hand, whirling the instrument around in a circle and releasing one of the strings to discharge the missile.
  • sloe gin — a cordial or liqueur made from gin flavored with sloes.
  • slogging — to hit hard, as in boxing or cricket; slug.
  • sludging — intravascular slowing or clumping of red blood cells.
  • slugging — a hard blow or hit, especially with a fist or baseball bat.
  • smogging — smoke or other atmospheric pollutants combined with fog in an unhealthy or irritating mixture.
  • smudging — a dirty mark or smear.
  • snagging — a tree or part of a tree held fast in the bottom of a river, lake, etc., and forming an impediment or danger to navigation.
  • snogging — to kiss and cuddle.
  • sponging — any aquatic, chiefly marine animal of the phylum Porifera, having a porous structure and usually a horny, siliceous or calcareous internal skeleton or framework, occurring in large, sessile colonies.
  • stagging — an adult male deer.
  • strigine — of or like an owl
  • swagging — Slang. plunder; booty. money; valuables. free merchandise distributed as part of the promotion of a product, company, etc. self-confidence and personal style as shown by one's appearance and demeanor: the top ten athletes with the most swag. schwag (def 1).
  • swigging — an amount of liquid, especially liquor, taken in one swallow; draught: He took a swig from the flask.
  • swinging — Also called Big Band music, swing music. a style of jazz, popular especially in the 1930s and often arranged for a large dance band, marked by a smoother beat and more flowing phrasing than Dixieland and having less complex harmonies and rhythms than modern jazz.
  • twanging — to give out a sharp, vibrating sound, as the string of a musical instrument when plucked.
  • urgingly — in an urging manner
  • v-engine — an internal-combustion engine having two opposed banks of cylinders inclined so that they form a V -shaped angle.
  • vaginant — (of a leaf) sheathing its stem or branch with its base
  • vaginate — having a vagina or sheath; sheathed.
  • vaginula — a little sheath, as found on the stalk of mosses
  • varginha — a city in E Brazil.
  • virginal — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or befitting a virgin: virginal purity.
  • virginia — a state in the E United States, on the Atlantic coast: part of the historical South. 40,815 sq. mi. (105,710 sq. km). Capital: Richmond. Abbreviation: VA (for use with zip code), Va.
  • vlogging — a blog that features mostly videos rather than text or images.
  • voyaging — a course of travel or passage, especially a long journey by water to a distant place.
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