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Answer for the clue "Wonder-ful word ", 3 letters:
gee

Alternative clues for the word gee

Word definitions for gee in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a unit of force equal to the force exerted by gravity; used to indicate the force to which a body is subjected when it is accelerated [syn: g , g-force ]

Usage examples of gee.

All I wanted was a drive that would let us accelerate at multiple gees without flattening the passengers.

To accelerate at thirty-two gee, the capsule must be about twenty meters from the disk to keep effective gravity inside to one gee.

When the drives are accelerating the whole thing at fourteen gee, the capsule is held a little less than fifty meters from the disk.

Assuming one-twentieth gee, that meant the rock had been accelerating for only ten or eleven minutes.

The disk pulled us towards it at twenty-one gee, the acceleration of the ship pulled us away from it at twenty gee, and we sat there in the middle at a snug and comfortable standard gravity.

We had both ships under one gee acceleration drives, complicated by the combined attraction of the two mass plates.

On the other hand, they seem to behave just like the asteroidal gee points.

High gee and low gee were not particularly demanding to one of my asthenic physique.

Gee whiz, you have to think quick at school exams, but cracky, leopards are worse than school principals, I should hope.

Gees and Cotton waited in silence until he returned, carrying a pair of hammerless breech loading shot guns.

Whispers, toots, keens, hooms, all sounded around them as the apparent gee force slowly declined toward zero as the program Gabby had set in motion gradually released the restaurant into free fall.

I quit being Jabal Radwa and changed my name back to Robert Gee for the second time.

Gees is investigating something between mumps and murder on this spot.

A remark by Gees set them all talking of place names--Oswaldstwhistle, Odder, Much Hadham, Nether Wallop, Wig-Wig, and other curiosities of naming, provided light chatter through which Gees observed that neither McCoul nor his daughter appeared to appreciate the really good plain cooking of the first two courses.

Through the grayness Gees could see the narrow line of beech and elm trees which the worthies of Odder designated a wood, an unkempt shrubbery running parallel with the graveled drive to the gateway, with thick undergrowth of brushwood and saplings.