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8-letter words containing go

  • gondomar — Diego Sarmiento de Acuña [dye-gaw sahr-myen-taw th e ah-koo-nyah] /ˈdyɛ gɔ sɑrˈmyɛn tɔ ðɛ ɑˈku nyɑ/ (Show IPA), Count of, 1567–1626, Spanish diplomat.
  • gondwana — a hypothetical landmass in the Southern Hemisphere that separated toward the end of the Paleozoic Era to form South America, Africa, Antarctica, and Australia.
  • gone out — blank and without comprehension, as if stupefied in surprise
  • goneness — a sinking sensation; exhaustion or faintness.
  • gonfalon — a banner suspended from a crossbar, often with several streamers or tails.
  • gonfanon — a gonfalon that hangs directly from a pole, especially from the shaft of a lance just below the lance head.
  • gongster — a person who strikes a gong
  • gonidium — (in algae) any one-celled asexual reproductive body, as a tetraspore or zoospore.
  • gonocyte — an oocyte or spermatocyte
  • gonoduct — a duct leading from a gonad to the exterior, through which gametes pass
  • gonopore — an opening through which eggs or sperm are released, especially in invertebrates.
  • gonosome — the individuals, collectively, in a colonial animal that are involved with reproduction
  • gonzalesRichard Alonzo ("Pancho") 1928–1995, U.S. tennis player.
  • gonzález — Julio (ˈxuljo). 1876–1942, Spanish sculptor: one of the first to create abstract geometric forms with soldered iron
  • good and — morally excellent; virtuous; righteous; pious: a good man.
  • good day — day spent well
  • good egg — a person who is pleasant, agreeable, or trustworthy.
  • good for — morally excellent; virtuous; righteous; pious: a good man.
  • good guy — decent man
  • good job — expressing admiration
  • good joe — a warm-hearted, good-natured person.
  • good old — You use good old before the name of a person, place, or thing when you are referring to them in an affectionate way.
  • good-bye — a farewell.
  • goodbyes — Plural form of goodbye.
  • goodness — the state or quality of being good.
  • goodrich — Samuel Griswold [griz-wuh ld,, -wohld,, -wawld] /ˈgrɪz wəld,, -woʊld,, -wɔld/ (Show IPA), ("Peter Parley") 1793–1860, U.S. author and publisher.
  • goodsire — a grandfather
  • goodwife — Chiefly Scot. the mistress of a household.
  • goodwill — friendly disposition; benevolence; kindness.
  • goodwood — an area in SE England, in Sussex: site of a famous racecourse and of Goodwood House, built 1780–1800
  • goodyearCharles, 1800–60, U.S. inventor: developer of the process of vulcanizing rubber.
  • goof off — to blunder; make an error, misjudgment, etc.
  • goof-off — a foolish or stupid person.
  • goofball — an extremely incompetent, eccentric, or silly person.
  • goofiest — ridiculous; silly; wacky; nutty: a goofy little hat.
  • googlies — Plural form of googly.
  • googling — Present participle of google.
  • googlish — Resembling or in the manner of Google.
  • gooiness — the quality of being gooey
  • goombahs — Plural form of goombah.
  • goon bag — the plastic bladder inside a box of (usually cheap) wine
  • goopiest — Superlative form of goopy.
  • goosegog — gooseberry.
  • goossensSir Eugene, 1893–1962, English composer and conductor.
  • gopurams — Plural form of gopuram.
  • gorbelly — a protruding belly.
  • gordimerNadine, 1923–2014, South African short-story writer and novelist: Nobel Prize 1991.
  • gore-tex — a type of synthetic fabric which is waterproof yet allows the wearer's skin to breathe; used for sportswear
  • gorgeous — splendid or sumptuous in appearance, coloring, etc.; magnificent: a gorgeous gown; a gorgeous sunset.
  • gorgerin — the neckline portion of a capital of a column, or a feature forming the junction between a shaft and its capital.
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