Anagrams of glutton
Word glutton has
1 exact anagrams and 89 other words
that can be made by using the letters of glutton.
- 2,4,5-t
-
noun,
a light-tan, water-insoluble solid, C 8 H 5 Cl 3 O 3 , used chiefly for killing weeds.
- glout
-
verb (used without object),
to scowl or frown.
- tungo
-
noun,
rat-kangaroo.
- gluon
-
noun,
an unobserved massless particle with spin 1 that is believed to transmit the strong force between quarks, binding them together into baryons and mesons.
- 30-30
-
- Luton
-
noun,
a city in Bedfordshire, S central England, NW of London.
- not-
-
- Lunt
-
noun,
a match; the flame used to light a fire.
- lung
-
noun,
either of the two saclike respiratory organs in the thorax of humans and the higher vertebrates.
- Toul
-
noun,
a fortress town in NE France, on the Moselle: siege 1870. 16,832.
- Lugo
-
noun,
a city in NW Spain.
- lout
-
noun,
an awkward, stupid person; clumsy, ill-mannered boor; oaf.
- loun
-
noun,
loon2 .
- Ont.
-
- out-
-
- log-
-
- 1080
-
- tong
-
noun,
tongs.
- tout
-
noun,
a person who solicits business, employment, support, or the like, importunately.
- unto
-
preposition,
to (in its various uses, except as the accompaniment of the infinitive).
- ungt
-
- ulto
-
- gon-
-
- gout
-
noun,
an acute, recurrent disease characterized by painful inflammation of the joints, chiefly those in the feet and hands, and especially in the great toe, and by an excess of uric acid in the blood.
- Tut
-
noun,
an exclamation of “tut.”.
- UNO
-
- ung
-
- NUL
-
- OLG
-
- ult
-
- ot-
-
- Tu.
-
- tun
-
noun,
a large cask for holding liquids, especially wine, ale, or beer.
- TGN
-
- tlo
-
- Tng
-
- TNT
-
- tog
-
noun,
a coat.
- ton
-
noun,
a unit of weight, equivalent to 2000 pounds (0.907 metric ton) avoirdupois (short ton) in the U.S. and 2240 pounds (1.016 metric tons) avoirdupois (long ton) in Great Britain.
- tug
-
noun,
an act or instance of tugging; pull; haul.
- tot
-
noun,
a small child.
- nog
-
noun,
any beverage made with beaten eggs, usually with alcoholic liquor; eggnog.
- NGO
-
noun,
1901–1963, South Vietnamese statesman: president of the Republic of South Vietnam 1956–63.
- NUT
-
noun,
a dry fruit consisting of an edible kernel or meat enclosed in a woody or leathery shell.
- Lt.
-
- lg.
-
- Gut
-
noun,
the alimentary canal, especially between the pylorus and the anus, or some portion of it.
Compare foregut, midgut, hindgut.
- Gun
-
noun,
a weapon consisting of a metal tube, with mechanical attachments, from which projectiles are shot by the force of an explosive; a piece of ordnance.
- LNG
-
- gul
-
noun,
a large octagonal design derived from the shape of a rose, a motif on Oriental rugs.
- GTT
-
- GTO
-
- gt.
-
- LON
-
- got
-
noun,
an offspring or the total of the offspring, especially of a male animal:
- Lot
-
noun,
one of a set of objects, as straws or pebbles, drawn or thrown from a container to decide a question or choice by chance.
- Lou
-
noun,
a male given name, form of Louis.
- GNU
-
noun,
either of two stocky, oxlike antelopes of the genus Connochaetes, the silver-gray, white-bearded C. taurinus of the eastern African plain and the black, white-tailed C. gnou of central South Africa: recently near extinction, the South African gnu is now protected.
- LUG
-
noun,
an act or instance of lugging; a forcible pull; haul.
- gl.
-
- Luo
-
noun,
a member of a people living mainly in southwest Kenya.
- U.
-
- UL
-
- GN
-
- TT
-
- GU
-
- GO
-
noun,
the act of going:
- G.
-
- L.
-
- ln
-
- L1
-
- LU
-
noun,
a male or female given name, form of Lou.
- NL
-
- No
-
noun,
an utterance of the word “no.”.
- N.
-
- NU
-
noun,
the 13th letter of the Greek alphabet (Ν, ν).
- O.
-
- OG
-
- ol
-
- OU
-
noun,
a rare Hawaiian honeycreeper, Psittirostra psittacea, having an olive-green body, a parrotlike bill, and in the male a bright yellow head.
- L2
-
- t.
-
- TG
-
- T1
-
- LO
-
adjective,
an informal, simplified spelling of low1 , used especially in labeling or advertising commercial products:
- TL
-
- TN
-
- NG
-
- UT
-
noun,
the syllable once generally used for the first tone or keynote of a scale and sometimes for the tone C: now commonly superseded by do.