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6-letter words containing a, b, h

  • betcha — I bet you
  • beulah — the land of Israel (Isaiah 62:4)
  • bhabha — Homi J(ehangir) [hoh-mee juh-hahn-geer] /ˈhoʊ mi dʒə hɑnˈgɪər/ (Show IPA), 1909–1966, Indian physicist and government official.
  • bhajan — the singing of devotional songs and hymns
  • bhakta — a devotee of God
  • bhakti — loving devotion to God leading to nirvana
  • bhangi — a Hindu scavenger who belongs to one of the untouchable castes.
  • bharal — a wild Himalayan sheep, Pseudois nayaur, with a bluish-grey coat and round backward-curving horns
  • bharat — India (the republic)
  • bhavan — (in India) a large house or building
  • bhilai — a city in S Madhya Pradesh, in central India.
  • bhopal — a city in central India, the capital of Madhya Pradesh state and of the former state of Bhopal: site of a poisonous gas leak from a US-owned factory, which killed over 7000 people in 1984 and was implicated in a further 15 000 deaths afterwards. Pop: 1 433 875 (2001)
  • bhutan — a kingdom in central Asia: disputed by Tibet, China, India, and Britain since the 18th century but most closely connected with India; contains inaccessible stretches of the E Himalayas in the north. Official language: Dzongka; Nepali is also spoken. Official religion: Mahayana Buddhist. Currencies: ngultrum and Indian rupee. Capital: Thimbu. Pop: 725 296 (2013 est). Area: about 46 600 sq km (18 000 sq miles)
  • bichat — Marie François Xavier [ma-ree frahn-swa gza-vyey] /maˈri frɑ̃ˈswa gzaˈvyeɪ/ (Show IPA), 1771–1802, French physician.
  • bigtha — one of the seven eunuchs who served in the court of King Ahasuerus. Esther 1:10.
  • bihari — a member of an Indian people living chiefly in Bihar but also in other parts of NW India and Bangladesh
  • bihzad — Kamal ad-Din [key-mahl ahd-deen] /ˈkeɪ mɑl ɑdˈdin/ (Show IPA), c1440–c1527, Persian painter and calligrapher.
  • bilhah — the mother of Dan and Naphtali. Gen. 30:1–8.
  • biztha — one of the seven eunuchs who served in the court of King Ahasuerus. Esther 1:10.
  • blanch — If you blanch, you suddenly become very pale.
  • blargh — /blarg/ [MIT] The opposite of ping. An exclamation indicating that one has absorbed or is emitting a quantum of unhappiness. Less common than ping.
  • blashy — very rainy
  • bleach — If you bleach something, you use a chemical to make it white or pale in colour.
  • bo hai — arm of the Yellow Sea, north of Shandong peninsula in NE China: c. 300 mi (483 km) long
  • bodach — an old man
  • bohica — (humour)   /bo-hee-ka/ Bend Over, Here It Comes Again.
  • bonham — a piglet
  • botham — Sir Ian (Terence). born 1955, English cricketer: an all-rounder, he played in 102 test matches (1977–1992) taking 383 wickets
  • bothan — a hut or booth, esp one used as an illegal drinking house
  • bpharm — Bachelor of Pharmacy
  • brahma — a Hindu god: in later Hindu tradition, the Creator who, with Vishnu, the Preserver, and Shiva, the Destroyer, constitutes the triad known as the Trimurti
  • brahmi — a script of India that was probably adapted from the Aramaic alphabet about the 7th century b.c., and from which most of the later Indian scripts developed.
  • brahms — Johannes (joˈhanəs). 1833–97, German composer, whose music, though classical in form, exhibits a strong lyrical romanticism. His works include four symphonies, four concertos, chamber music, and A German Requiem (1868)
  • brahui — a language spoken in Pakistan, forming an isolated branch of the Dravidian family
  • bramahJoseph, 1748–1814, English engineer and inventor.
  • branch — The branches of a tree are the parts that grow out from its trunk and have leaves, flowers, or fruit growing on them.
  • brashy — loosely fragmented; rubbishy
  • breach — If you breach an agreement, a law, or a promise, you break it.
  • breath — Your breath is the air that you let out through your mouth when you breathe. If someone has bad breath, their breath smells unpleasant.
  • broach — When you broach a subject, especially a sensitive one, you mention it in order to start a discussion on it.
  • buchan — John, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir. 1875–1940, Scottish statesman, historian, and writer of adventure stories, esp The Thirty-Nine Steps (1915) and Greenmantle (1916); governor general of Canada (1935–40)
  • buddha — Buddha is the title given to Gautama Siddhartha, the religious teacher and founder of Buddhism.
  • bugsha — buqsha.
  • buqsha — a former Yemeni coin worth one-fortieth of a rial
  • burkha — all-enveloping garment worn by Muslim women
  • bushwa — nonsense
  • bypath — a little-used path or track, esp in the country
  • cahaba — a river in N central Alabama, flowing S to the Alabama River. 191 miles (307 km) long.
  • casbah — the crowded quarter of Algiers, Algeria
  • chabuk — (in Asia, especially the East) a horsewhip, formerly often used for inflicting corporal punishment.
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