These are the meanings of the letters ENGUAR when you unscramble them.
- Anger (n.)
A strong passion or emotion of displeasure or antagonism, excited by a real or supposed injury or insult to one's self or others, or by the intent to do such injury.
- Anger (n.)
Trouble; vexation; also, physical pain or smart of a sore, etc.
- Anger (v. t.)
To excite to anger; to enrage; to provoke.
- Anger (v. t.)
To make painful; to cause to smart; to inflame.
- Argue (v. i.)
To contend in argument; to dispute; to reason; -- followed by with; as, you may argue with your friend without convincing him.
- Argue (v. i.)
To invent and offer reasons to support or overthrow a proposition, opinion, or measure; to use arguments; to reason.
- Argue (v. t.)
To blame; to accuse; to charge with.
- Argue (v. t.)
To debate or discuss; to treat by reasoning; as, the counsel argued the cause before a full court; the cause was well argued.
- Argue (v. t.)
To persuade by reasons; as, to argue a man into a different opinion.
- Argue (v. t.)
To prove or evince; too manifest or exhibit by inference, deduction, or reasoning.
- Auger (n.)
A carpenter's tool for boring holes larger than those bored by a gimlet. It has a handle placed crosswise by which it is turned with both hands. A pod auger is one with a straight channel or groove, like the half of a bean pod. A screw auger has a twisted blade, by the spiral groove of which the chips are discharge.
- Auger (n.)
An instrument for boring or perforating soils or rocks, for determining the quality of soils, or the nature of the rocks or strata upon which they lie, and for obtaining water.
- Genua (pl. )
of Genu
- Range (n.)
To be native to, or to live in; to frequent.
- Range (n.)
To dispose in a classified or in systematic order; to arrange regularly; as, to range plants and animals in genera and species.
- Range (n.)
To place (as a single individual) among others in a line, row, or order, as in the ranks of an army; -- usually, reflexively and figuratively, (in the sense) to espouse a cause, to join a party, etc.
- Range (n.)
To rove over or through; as, to range the fields.
- Range (n.)
To sail or pass in a direction parallel to or near; as, to range the coast.
- Range (n.)
To separate into parts; to sift.
- Range (n.)
To set in a row, or in rows; to place in a regular line or lines, or in ranks; to dispose in the proper order; to rank; as, to range soldiers in line.
- Range (v.)
A bolting sieve to sift meal.
- Range (v.)
A kitchen grate.
- Range (v.)
A place where shooting, as with cannons or rifles, is practiced.
- Range (v.)
A series of things in a line; a row; a rank; as, a range of buildings; a range of mountains.
- Range (v.)
A wandering or roving; a going to and fro; an excursion; a ramble; an expedition.
- Range (v.)
An aggregate of individuals in one rank or degree; an order; a class.
- Range (v.)
An extended cooking apparatus of cast iron, set in brickwork, and affording conveniences for various ways of cooking; also, a kind of cooking stove.
- Range (v.)
Extent or space taken in by anything excursive; compass or extent of excursion; reach; scope; discursive power; as, the range of one's voice, or authority.
- Range (v.)
In the public land system of the United States, a row or line of townships lying between two successive meridian lines six miles apart.
- Range (v.)
See Range of cable, below.
- Range (v.)
Sometimes, less properly, the trajectory of a shot or projectile.
- Range (v.)
That which may be ranged over; place or room for excursion; especially, a region of country in which cattle or sheep may wander and pasture.
- Range (v.)
The horizontal distance to which a shot or other projectile is carried.
- Range (v.)
The region within which a plant or animal naturally lives.
- Range (v.)
The step of a ladder; a rung.
- Range (v. i.)
To be native to, or live in, a certain district or region; as, the peba ranges from Texas to Paraguay.
- Range (v. i.)
To be placed in order; to be ranked; to admit of arrangement or classification; to rank.
- Range (v. i.)
To have a certain direction; to correspond in direction; to be or keep in a corresponding line; to trend or run; -- often followed by with; as, the front of a house ranges with the street; to range along the coast.
- Range (v. i.)
To have range; to change or differ within limits; to be capable of projecting, or to admit of being projected, especially as to horizontal distance; as, the temperature ranged through seventy degrees Fahrenheit; the gun ranges three miles; the shot ranged four miles.
- Range (v. i.)
To rove at large; to wander without restraint or direction; to roam.
- regna (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Rugae (pl. )
of Ruga