7-letter words containing ig
- bigging — a building, especially one's home.
- biggish — Something that is biggish is fairly big.
- biggity — conceited
- bighead — a conceited person
- bighorn — a large wild sheep, Ovis canadensis, inhabiting mountainous regions in North America and NE Asia: family Bovidae, order Artiodactyla. The male has massive curved horns, and the species is well adapted for climbing and leaping
- bigness — the fact or condition of being large in size, extent, amount, etc.
- bigoted — Someone who is bigoted has strong, unreasonable prejudices or opinions and will not change them, even when they are proved to be wrong.
- bigotry — Bigotry is the possession or expression of strong, unreasonable prejudices or opinions.
- blighty — Blighty is a way of referring to England.
- bobigny — a department in N France. 91 sq. mi. (236 sq. km). Capital: Bobigny.
- brigade — A brigade is one of the groups which an army is divided into.
- brigand — A brigand is someone who attacks people and robs them, especially in mountains or forests.
- brigham — a male given name.
- brights — the high beam of the headlights of a motor vehicle
- bushpig — a wild pig, Potamochoerus porcus, inhabiting forests in tropical Africa and Madagascar. It is brown or black, with pale markings on the face
- buzzwig — a bushy wig
- cat rig — the rig of a catboat
- chigger — the parasitic larva of any of various free-living mites of the family Trombidiidae, which causes intense itching of human skin
- chignon — A chignon is a knot of hair worn at the back of a woman's head.
- chigoes — Plural form of chigoe.
- cigaret — a cylindrical roll of finely cut tobacco cured for smoking, considerably smaller than most cigars and usually wrapped in thin white paper.
- ciggies — Plural form of ciggy.
- coligny — Gaspard de (ɡaspar də), Seigneur de Châtillon. 1519–72, French Huguenot leader
- condign — (esp of a punishment) fitting; deserved
- consign — To consign something or someone to a place where they will be forgotten about, or to an unpleasant situation or place, means to put them there.
- contigs — Plural form of contig.
- coreign — to reign jointly
- craigie — Sir William A(lexander). 1867–1957, Scottish lexicographer; joint editor of the Oxford English Dictionary (1901–33), and of A Dictionary of American English on Historical Principles (1938–44)
- dealign — To put, or to become, out of alignment.
- debeige — A kind of woollen or mixed dress goods.
- deigned — Do something that one considers to be beneath one's dignity.
- delight — Delight is a feeling of very great pleasure.
- demigod — In mythology, a demigod is a less important god, especially one who is half god and half human.
- deraign — to contest (a claim, suit, etc)
- desighn — Misspelling of design.
- designs — Plural form of design.
- dig out — to break up, turn over, or remove earth, sand, etc., as with a shovel, spade, bulldozer, or claw; make an excavation.
- digamma — a letter of the early Greek alphabet that generally fell into disuse in Attic Greek before the classical period and that represented a sound similar to English w.
- digests — Plural form of digest.
- diggers — a person or an animal that digs.
- digging — to make one's way or work by or as by removing or turning over material: to dig through the files.
- dighted — Simple past tense and past participle of dight.
- digibox — a device which converts the signals from a digital television broadcast into a form which can be viewed on a standard television set
- digicam — A digital camera.
- digicom — ftp://ftp.whnet.com/pub/wolfgang, ftp://softmodem.whnet.com/pub/wolfgang, ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/wolfgang. http://ftp.whnet.com/wolfgang/.
- digital — of, relating to, or using numerical calculations.
- digiti- — of the fingers or toes
- digitus — An Ancient Roman unit of length, approximately 0.73 inches.
- diglyph — (in a Doric frieze) a type of ornament consisting of two vertical grooves carved into the stone
- dignify — to confer honor or dignity upon; honor; ennoble.