0%

6-letter words that end in g

  • owning — (used as an intensifier to indicate oneself as the sole agent of some activity or action, preceded by a possessive): He insists on being his own doctor.
  • oxgang — an old measure of farmland
  • pacing — a rate of movement, especially in stepping, walking, etc.: to walk at a brisk pace of five miles an hour.
  • padang — a seaport in W central Sumatra, in W Indonesia.
  • padnag — an ambling horse
  • paging — a boy servant or attendant.
  • pahang — a state in Malaysia, on the SE Malay Peninsula. 13,820 sq. mi. (35,794 sq. km). Capital: Kuantan.
  • paling — a stake or picket, as of a fence.
  • parang — a large, heavy knife used as a tool or a weapon in Malaysia and Indonesia.
  • paring — the act of a person or thing that pares.
  • parlog — Clark & Gregory, Imperial College 1983. An AND-parallel Prolog, with guards and committed choice nondeterminism (don't care nondeterminism). Shallow backtracking only. Implementations: MacParlog and PC-Parlog from Parallel Logic Programming Ltd., Box 49 Twickenham TW2 5PH, UK. See also SPM.
  • paving — Southern Louisiana. a paved road.
  • pawing — the foot of an animal having claws.
  • paying — work: that is paid
  • peeing — to urinate.
  • peking — Older Spelling. Beijing.
  • penang — an island in SE Asia, off the W coast of the Malay Peninsula. 110 sq. mi. (285 sq. km).
  • pfenig — a monetary unit of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the 100th part of a marka.
  • photog — a photographer.
  • pi-dog — an ownerless half-wild dog of uncertain breeding, common in the villages and towns of India and other countries in east and south Asia.
  • picong — any teasing or satirical banter, originally a verbal duel in song
  • pieing — to reduce (printing types) to a state of confusion.
  • piking — a shafted weapon having a pointed head, formerly used by infantry.
  • piling — a cylindrical or flat member of wood, steel, concrete, etc., often tapered or pointed at the lower end, hammered vertically into soil to form part of a foundation or retaining wall.
  • pinang — Penang.
  • pining — to yearn deeply; suffer with longing; long painfully (often followed by for): to pine for one's home and family.
  • piping — pipe
  • plying — British Dialect. to bend, fold, or mold.
  • pohang — a port city in SE South Korea.
  • poking — to prod or push, especially with something narrow or pointed, as a finger, elbow, stick, etc.: to poke someone in the ribs.
  • poling — a long, cylindrical, often slender piece of wood, metal, etc.: a telephone pole; a fishing pole.
  • pooing — excrement.
  • poplog — A multi-language programming environment, which includes the languages Pop-11, ML, Common Lisp and Prolog. It supports mixed-language programming and incremental compilation and includes a comprehensive X Window System interface. It is built on top of a two-stack virtual machine, PVM. POPLOG was developed at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK.
  • poring — to read or study with steady attention or application: a scholar poring over a rare old manuscript.
  • posing — to assume a particular attitude or stance, especially with the hope of impressing others: He likes to pose as an authority on literature.
  • poyang — a lake in E China, in Kiangsi province. 90 miles (145 km) long.
  • prelog — Vladimir [vlad-uh-meer] /ˈvlæd əˌmɪər/ (Show IPA), 1906–98, Swiss chemist, born in Yugoslavia: Nobel prize 1975.
  • proleg — one of the abdominal ambulatory processes of caterpillars and other larvae, as distinct from the true or thoracic legs.
  • prolog — a preliminary discourse; a preface or introductory part of a discourse, poem, or novel.
  • prying — that pries; looking or searching curiously.
  • pugdog — pug1 (def 1).
  • puling — whining; whimpering: a puling child.
  • putlog — any of a number of short pieces of lumber supporting a scaffold's floor.
  • pygarg — an antelope mentioned by Pliny, Herodotus, and in the Bible perhaps the addax
  • qigong — a Chinese system of breathing exercises, body postures and movements, and mental concentration, intended to maintain good health and control the flow of vital energy.
  • quahog — an edible clam, Venus (Mercenaria) mercenaria, inhabiting waters along the Atlantic coast, having a relatively thick shell.
  • quohog — quahog
  • racing — a contest of speed, as in running, riding, driving, or sailing.
  • ragbag — a bag in which small pieces of cloth are kept for use in mending.
  • raging — angry fury; violent anger (sometimes used in combination): a speech full of rage; incidents of road rage.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?