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8-letter words that end in ge

  • coolidge — (John) Calvin. 1872–1933, 30th president of the US (1923–29)
  • coverage — The coverage of something in the news is the reporting of it.
  • cozenage — the practice of cozening.
  • crannoge — Alt form crannog.
  • creepage — a slow and gradual movement
  • cribbage — a game of cards for two to four, in which players try to win a set number of points before their opponents
  • dark age — If you refer to a period in the history of a society as a dark age, you think that it is characterized by a lack of knowledge and progress.
  • debitage — lithic debris and discards found at the sites where stone tools and weapons were made.
  • decalage — the difference between the angles of incidence of the upper and lower wings of a biplane: A biplane has positive decalage if the angle of incidence of the upper wing is greater than that of the lower wing and negative decalage when the lower wing has the greater angle.
  • demiurge — (in the philosophy of Plato) the creator of the universe
  • demorage — Obsolete form of demurrage.
  • desludge — mud, mire, or ooze; slush.
  • diallage — a green or brownish-black variety of the mineral augite in the form of layers of platelike crystals
  • disgorge — to eject or throw out from the throat, mouth, or stomach; vomit forth.
  • dislodge — to remove or force out of a particular place: to dislodge a stone with one's foot.
  • dispunge — to expunge
  • disrange — (obsolete) To disarrange.
  • disusage — Gradual cessation of use or custom; disuse.
  • drainage — the act or process of draining.
  • dressage — haute école (def 1).
  • driftage — the action or an amount of drifting.
  • drippage — a dripping, as of water from a faucet.
  • droppage — an amount dropped or wasted during application, installation, etc.: Mix some extra plaster to allow for droppage.
  • ecolodge — A building designed to house ecotourists, typically built and supported by local labour and with respect for the environment.
  • enallage — (uncountable, rhetoric) Transformation from one grammatically correct form to another.
  • encharge — (obsolete, transitive) To give to somebody as a charge; to entrust with a duty or task.
  • endamage — (archaic) To damage.
  • enfringe — Alternative form of infringe.
  • ensilage — The process of producing silage by the fermentation of green fodder.
  • envisage — Contemplate or conceive of as a possibility or a desirable future event.
  • equipage — The equipment for a particular purpose.
  • estrange — Cause (someone) to be no longer close or affectionate to someone; alienate.
  • etherege — Sir George. ?1635–?92, English Restoration dramatist; author of the comedies The Comical Revenge (1664), She would if she could (1668), and The Man of Mode (1676)
  • exchange — Give something and receive something of the same kind in return.
  • ferriage — conveyance or transportation by a ferryboat.
  • floatage — an act of floating.
  • floorage — floor space.
  • fly page — banner
  • fontange — Often, fontanges. commode (def 4).
  • footpage — an errand-boy
  • forjudge — to exclude, expel, dispossess, or deprive by a judgment.
  • frautage — cargo
  • frondage — (collectively) the fronds (of a plant)
  • frontage — the front of a building or lot.
  • frottage — a technique in the visual arts of obtaining textural effects or images by rubbing lead, chalk, charcoal, etc., over paper laid on a granular or relieflike surface. Compare rubbing (def 2).
  • fruitage — the bearing of fruit: soil additives to hasten the fruitage.
  • fuselage — the complete central structure to which the wing, tail surfaces, and engines are attached on an airplane.
  • graftage — the art or practice of inserting a part of one plant into another plant in such a way that the two will unite and continue their growth.
  • grainage — the duty paid on grain
  • grammage — the weight of paper expressed as grams per square metre
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