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9-letter words that end in ge

  • re-engage — to take part in or participate again
  • rearrange — to place in proper, desired, or convenient order; adjust properly: to arrange books on a shelf.
  • recoinage — the act, process, or right of making coins.
  • redbridge — a borough of Greater London, England.
  • repackage — to package again or afresh, as in a different style, design, or size: The soap has been repackaged to be more eye-catching.
  • repassage — a passage back or return, a repass or act of repassing
  • repechage — (in cycling and rowing) a last-chance qualifying heat in which the runners-up in earlier heats race each other, with the winner advancing to the finals.
  • reportage — the act or technique of reporting news.
  • restringe — to restrict, contract, or confine
  • ring gage — a gage for checking the diameters of circular manufactured objects, consisting of a ring having a hole that is of either the maximum or minimum allowable diameter.
  • road rage — a fit of violent anger by the driver of an automobile, especially one directed toward and endangering other motorists or pedestrians.
  • rockledge — a city in E central Florida.
  • roid rage — angry and aggressive behaviour caused by the use of anabolic steroids
  • roll cage — a system of metal bars fitted around the seating area of a vehicle, especially a racing car, to prevent the occupants from being crushed if the vehicle rolls over.
  • sacrilege — the violation or profanation of anything sacred or held sacred.
  • saxifrage — any plant of the genus Saxifraga, certain species of which grow wild in the clefts of rocks, other species of which are cultivated for their flowers.
  • scrappage — the act or process of scrapping
  • scrimmage — a rough or vigorous struggle.
  • scrippage — the contents of a scrip
  • scrummage — scrum (defs 1, 3).
  • sea gauge — an automatic sounding device registering the depth to which it is lowered.
  • secretage — the use of mercury in treating or felting furs
  • selfridgeHarry Gordon, 1857?–1947, British retail merchant, born in the U.S.
  • shrinkage — the act or fact of shrinking.
  • shroffage — the commission charged by a money dealer
  • siphonage — the action of a siphon.
  • skybridge — Also called skywalk. a bridgelike structure for pedestrians built to link one building with another over a public alley or street.
  • skylounge — a vehicle designed to be lifted by helicopter between an intown passenger terminal and an airport.
  • slanguage — slang; a vocabulary of slang.
  • sortilege — the drawing of lots for divination; divination by lot.
  • space age — period post-1950s onwards
  • space-age — pertaining to or characteristic of the Space Age.
  • spicilege — an anthology or gleaning
  • stevenage — a town in N Hertfordshire, in SE England.
  • stone age — the period in the history of humankind, preceding the Bronze Age and the Iron Age, and marked by the use of stone implements and weapons: subdivided into the Paleolithic, Mesolithic, and Neolithic periods.
  • streetage — a toll charged for using a street
  • surcharge — an additional charge, tax, or cost.
  • tallmadge — a city in NE Ohio.
  • tax dodge — a way of avoiding having to pay the full amount of tax owed; it may be legal or illegal
  • telferage — a transportation system in which cars or other carriers are suspended from or run on wire cables or the like, especially one operated by electricity.
  • teniafuge — an agent or medicine for expelling tapeworms from the body.
  • the lodge — the official Canberra residence of the Australian Prime Minister
  • the stage — the theatre as a profession
  • tide gage — a gauge for measuring the level of the tide: usually equipped with a marigraph.
  • tonbridge — a market town in SE England, in SW Kent on the River Medway. Pop: 35 833 (2001)
  • treillage — latticework; a lattice or trellis.
  • uk garage — a type of electronic dance music originating in Britain in the 1990s
  • unaverage — not average or ordinary
  • unbandage — to remove a bandage
  • under age — Someone who is under age is not legally old enough to do something, for example to buy an alcoholic drink.
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