| GAIETY | • gaiety n. (Dated, uncountable) The state of being happy or merry. • gaiety n. (Dated, countable) Merrymaking or festivity. • GAIETY n. festive activity, also GAYETY. |
| GAIJIN | • gaijin n. (From the perspective of a Japanese person) A non-Japanese person. • GAIJIN n. (Japanese) a foreigner in Japan. |
| GAINED | • gained v. Simple past tense and past participle of gain. • GAIN v. to acquire. |
| GAINER | • gainer n. One who gains a profit or advantage. • gainer n. One who puts on weight. • gainer n. (Sports, slang) A diving or gymnastics maneuver, from a high diving board or platform, involving a simultaneous… |
| GAINLY | • gainly adv. Suitably; fitly; conveniently; readily. • gainly adv. Thoroughly; completely; (with adjectives) very. • gainly adj. (UK dialectal) Proper; suitable; becoming. |
| GAINST | • gainst prep. (Poetic) against. • 'gainst prep. (Poetic) Contraction of against. • GAINST prep. (archaic) against. |
| GAITAS | • GAITA n. (Spanish) a Spanish bagpipe. |
| GAITED | • gaited v. Simple past tense and past participle of gait. • GAIT v. to train a horse to move in a certain way. |
| GAITER | • gaiter n. A covering of cloth or leather for the ankle and instep. • gaiter n. A covering cloth or leather for the whole leg from the knee to the instep, fitting down upon the shoe. • gaiter n. Part of the ecclesiastical garb of a bishop. |
| GAITTS | • GAITT n. (Scots) a child, also GEIT, GYTE. |
| GILGAI | • gilgai n. (Australia) A small concavity or depression between ridges, where rainwater gathers. • GILGAI n. (Native Australian) a saucer-shaped depression forming a natural reservoir, also GHILGAI. |
| LAOGAI | • laogai n. The use of prison labor and prison farms in the People’s Republic of China. • LAOGAI n. (Chinese) the system of forced labor camps in China. |
| NGAIOS | • ngaios n. Plural of ngaio. • NGAIO n. (Maori) a New Zealand tree with white wood. |
| NILGAI | • nilgai n. A large antelope, of the genus Boselaphus, from northern India; the blue bull. • NILGAI n. (Hindi) a large antelope, also NILGAU, NILGHAI, NILGHAU, NYLGHAI, NYLGHAU. |
| REGAIN | • regain v. (Transitive) To get back; to recover possession of. • regain n. The act or process of regaining something. • regain n. (Textiles) The amount of width a woven cloth grows by when the fibers swell, used to determine the width… |
| UNGAIN | • ungain adj. (Obsolete or UK, dialect) ungainly; clumsy; awkward. • ungain adj. (Obsolete or UK, dialect) troublesome; inconvenient. • UNGAIN adj. (dialect) awkward, uncouth, also UNGAINLY. |