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7-letter words that end in ing

  • feeding — food, especially for farm animals, as cattle, horses or chickens.
  • feeling — a quality of an object that is perceived by feeling or touching: the soft feel of cotton.
  • feening — Satan; the devil.
  • feezing — Present participle of feeze.
  • feining — Present participle of feine.
  • felling — simple past tense of fall.
  • felting — a nonwoven fabric of wool, fur, or hair, matted together by heat, moisture, and great pressure.
  • fencing — a barrier enclosing or bordering a field, yard, etc., usually made of posts and wire or wood, used to prevent entrance, to confine, or to mark a boundary.
  • fending — to ward off (often followed by off): to fend off blows.
  • ferning — (of cervical mucus) the formation of a fern-like pattern
  • feteing — a day of celebration; holiday: The Fourth of July is a great American fete.
  • fetting — Present participle of fet.
  • feuding — Also called blood feud. a bitter, continuous hostility, especially between two families, clans, etc., often lasting for many years or generations.
  • fibbing — a small or trivial lie; minor falsehood.
  • figging — The insertion of ginger root into the anus, vagina or urethra, originally applied to horses as a form of deception as to the horse's condition and later used in BDSM practices.
  • filling — a full supply; enough to satisfy want or desire: to eat one's fill.
  • filming — a thin layer or coating: a film of grease on a plate.
  • finding — an act of finding or discovering.
  • finking — Present participle of fink.
  • finning — a membranous, winglike or paddlelike organ attached to any of various parts of the body of fishes and certain other aquatic animals, used for propulsion, steering, or balancing.
  • firming — not soft or yielding when pressed; comparatively solid, hard, stiff, or rigid: firm ground; firm texture.
  • fishing — the act of catching fish.
  • fisting — Chiefly South Midland and Southern U.S. a small mongrel dog, especially one that is ill-tempered; cur; mutt.
  • fitting — adapted or suited; appropriate: This water isn't fit for drinking. A long-necked giraffe is fit for browsing treetops.
  • fizzing — to make a hissing or sputtering sound; effervesce.
  • flaking — fake2 (defs 2, 3).
  • flaming — flame
  • flaring — blazing; flaming.
  • flating — (obsolete) With the flat side, as of a sword; flatlong; in a prostrate position.
  • flawing — Present participle of flaw.
  • flaying — to strip off the skin or outer covering of.
  • fleeing — Present participle of flee.
  • flemingSir Alexander, 1881–1955, Scottish bacteriologist and physician: discoverer of penicillin 1928; Nobel Prize in Medicine 1945.
  • flexing — to bend, as a part of the body: He flexed his arms to show off his muscles.
  • fliping — Present participle of flipe.
  • fliting — a dispute or wrangle; scolding.
  • flowing — moving in or as in a stream: flowing water.
  • fluking — Present participle of fluke.
  • fluming — a deep narrow defile containing a mountain stream or torrent.
  • fluting — a musical wind instrument consisting of a tube with a series of fingerholes or keys, in which the wind is directed against a sharp edge, either directly, as in the modern transverse flute, or through a flue, as in the recorder.
  • fluxing — a flowing or flow.
  • flyting — to dispute; wrangle; scold; jeer.
  • foaling — a young horse, mule, or related animal, especially one that is not yet one year of age.
  • foaming — a collection of minute bubbles formed on the surface of a liquid by agitation, fermentation, etc.: foam on a glass of beer.
  • fobbing — Archaic. to cheat; deceive.
  • fogging — a cloudlike mass or layer of minute water droplets or ice crystals near the surface of the earth, appreciably reducing visibility. Compare ice fog, mist, smog.
  • foiling — Present participle of foil.
  • foining — Present participle of foin.
  • folding — to confine (sheep or other domestic animals) in a fold.
  • fooling — a silly or stupid person; a person who lacks judgment or sense.
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