7-letter words containing ng
- briming — the phosphorescence of seawater
- bringer — A bringer of something is someone who brings or provides it.
- broking — acting as a broker
- brüning — Heinrich (ˈhainrɪç). 1885–1970, German statesman; chancellor (1930–32). He was forced to resign in 1932, making way for the Nazis
- bruting — the primary step in diamond cutting in which the girdle is shaped, often with another diamond
- bubinga — the tree Guibourtia demeusui, native to tropical African regions
- bucking — bukh.
- budding — If you describe someone as, for example, a budding businessman or a budding artist, you mean that they are starting to succeed or become interested in business or art.
- buffing — polishing
- bugging — surveillance using a hidden microphone
- bulging — a rounded projection, bend, or protruding part; protuberance; hump: a bulge in a wall.
- bulking — the expansion of excavated material to a volume greater than that of the excavation from which it came
- bulling — the male of a bovine animal, especially of the genus Bos, with sexual organs intact and capable of reproduction.
- bumming — a person who avoids work and sponges on others; loafer; idler.
- bumping — to come more or less violently in contact with; collide with; strike: His car bumped a truck.
- bung up — a stopper for the opening of a cask.
- bungest — out of order; broken; unusable.
- bungled — to do clumsily and awkwardly; botch: He bungled the job.
- bungler — A bungler is a person who often fails to do things properly because they make mistakes or are clumsy.
- bunking — a built-in platform bed, as on a ship.
- bunting — Bunting consists of rows of small coloured flags that are used to decorate streets and buildings on special occasions.
- buoying — Nautical. a distinctively shaped and marked float, sometimes carrying a signal or signals, anchored to mark a channel, anchorage, navigational hazard, etc., or to provide a mooring place away from the shore.
- burking — to murder, as by suffocation, so as to leave no or few marks of violence.
- burning — You use burning to describe something that is extremely hot.
- burring — a pronunciation of the r- sound as a uvular trill, as in certain Northern English dialects.
- bushing — an adaptor having ends of unequal diameters, often with internal screw threads, used to connect pipes of different sizes
- busking — Chiefly British. to entertain by dancing, singing, or reciting on the street or in a public place.
- bussing — a large motor vehicle, having a long body, equipped with seats or benches for passengers, usually operating as part of a scheduled service; omnibus.
- busying — actively and attentively engaged in work or a pastime: busy with her work.
- butting — a push or blow with the head or horns.
- buzzing — a low, vibrating, humming sound, as of bees, machinery, or people talking.
- cabbing — a taxicab.
- cabling — Cabling is used to refer to electrical or electronic cables, or to the process of putting them in a place.
- caching — cache
- cadging — Present participle of cadge.
- calking — Present participle of calk.
- calling — A calling is a profession or career which someone is strongly attracted to, especially one which involves helping other people.
- calming — soothing; tranquillizing
- calving — to give birth to a calf: The cow is expected to calve tomorrow.
- camming — Machinery. a disk or cylinder having an irregular form such that its motion, usually rotary, gives to a part or parts in contact with it a specific rocking or reciprocating motion.
- camping — something that provides sophisticated, knowing amusement, as by virtue of its being artlessly mannered or stylized, self-consciously artificial and extravagant, or teasingly ingenuous and sentimental.
- campong — a small village or community of houses in Malay-speaking lands.
- canings — Plural form of caning.
- canning — the process or business of sealing food in cans or tins to preserve it
- canoing — Misspelling of canoeing.
- canting — insincere; hypocritical
- capping — a capital letter.
- carding — the process of preparing the fibres of cotton, wool, etc, for spinning
- carking — distressful.
- carling — a fore-and-aft beam in a vessel, used for supporting the deck, esp around a hatchway or other opening