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6-letter words containing a, b, i, r

  • braird — the first shoots of grass or crops
  • braise — When you braise meat or a vegetable, you fry it quickly and then cook it slowly in a covered dish with a small amount of liquid.
  • brasil — Brazil
  • brazil — the red wood obtained from various tropical leguminous trees of the genus Caesalpinia, such as C. echinata of America: used for cabinetwork
  • briand — Aristide (aristid). 1862–1932, French socialist statesman: prime minister of France 11 times. He was responsible for the separation of Church and State (1905) and he advocated a United States of Europe. Nobel peace prize 1926
  • briard — a medium-sized dog of an ancient French sheep-herding breed having a long rough coat of a single colour
  • briary — brier1 .
  • bridal — Bridal is used to describe something that belongs or relates to a bride, or to both a bride and her bridegroom.
  • burial — A burial is the act or ceremony of putting a dead body into a grave in the ground.
  • buriat — Buryat.
  • cabiri — a group of gods, probably of Eastern origin, worshiped in mysteries in various parts of ancient Greece, the cult centers being at Samothrace and Thebes.
  • cabrie — a ruminant mammal, Antilocapra americana, that inhabits rocky deserts of North America and has small branched horns
  • caribe — a piranha
  • disbar — to expel from the legal profession or from the bar of a particular court.
  • fabric — a cloth made by weaving, knitting, or felting fibers: woolen fabrics.
  • gambir — an astringent extract obtained from the leaves and young shoots of a tropical Asian shrub, Uncaria gambir, of the madder family, used in medicine, dyeing, tanning, etc.
  • gibran — Kahlil [kah-leel] /kɑˈlil/ (Show IPA), 1883–1931, Lebanese mystic, poet, dramatist, and artist; in the U.S. after 1910.
  • habiru — a nomadic people mentioned in Assyro-Babylonian literature: possibly the early Hebrews.
  • harbin — a province in NE China, S of the Amur River. 108,880 sq. mi. (281,999 sq. km). Capital: Harbin.
  • iberia — Also called Iberian Peninsula. a peninsula in SW Europe, comprising Spain and Portugal.
  • imbark — to cover in bark
  • isobar — Meteorology. a line drawn on a weather map or chart that connects points at which the barometric pressure is the same.
  • jabari — a male given name: from a Swahili word meaning “brave.”.
  • jabiru — a large stork, Jabiru mycteria, of the warmer regions of the New World.
  • jibaro — an inhabitant of the rural regions of Puerto Rico.
  • kariba — an artificial lake in SE Africa on the border of SW Zimbabwe and S Zambia: site of hydroelectric power project. About 2000 sq. mi. (5200 sq. km).
  • labrid — any of numerous fishes of the family Labridae, including the wrasses, the tautog, and the cunner, and characterized chiefly by well-developed teeth and, often, brilliant colors.
  • libera — an ancient Italian goddess of wine, vineyards, and fertility and the wife of Liber, in later times identified with Persephone.
  • librae — Plural form of libra.
  • libral — (obsolete) Of a pound in weight.
  • libran — a person born under the sign of Libra
  • marabi — A lively music genre from South Africa.
  • mbiras — Plural form of mbira.
  • mihrab — (in a mosque) a niche or decorative panel designating the kiblah.
  • mimbar — a pulpit in a mosque.
  • minbar — A short flight of steps used as a platform by a preacher in a mosque.
  • rabbin — rabbi1 .
  • rabbis — Plural form of rabbi.
  • rabbit — any of several soft-furred, large-eared, rodentlike burrowing mammals of the family Leporidae, allied with the hares and pikas in the order Lagomorpha, having a divided upper lip and long hind legs, usually smaller than the hares and mainly distinguished from them by bearing blind and furless young in nests rather than fully developed young in the open.
  • rabi i — the third month of the Muslim calendar.
  • rabies — an infectious disease of dogs, cats, and other animals, transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected animal and usually fatal if prophylactic treatment is not administered: caused by an RNA virus of the rhabdovirus group; hydrophobia.
  • rbasic — Database language for Revelation, by Cosmos, Inc. Combines features of BASIC, Pascal and Fortran.
  • rebait — food, or some substitute, used as a lure in fishing, trapping, etc.
  • ribald — vulgar or indecent in speech, language, etc.; coarsely mocking, abusive, or irreverent; scurrilous.
  • riband — a decorative ribbon.
  • ribera — José de [hoh-zey duh;; Spanish haw-se th e] /hoʊˈzeɪ də;; Spanish hɔˈsɛ ðɛ/ (Show IPA), (Jusepe de Ribera"Lo Spagnoletto") 1588–1652, Spanish printmaker and painter active in Naples.
  • robbia — Andrea della [ahn-dre-ah del-lah] /ɑnˈdrɛ ɑ ˌdɛl lɑ/ (Show IPA), 1435–1525, and his uncle, Luca della [loo-kah del-lah] /ˈlu kɑ ˌdɛl lɑ/ (Show IPA) c1400–82, Italian sculptors.
  • rubbia — Carlo [jahr-loh;; Italian kahr-law] /ˈdʒɑr loʊ;; Italian ˈkɑr lɔ/ (Show IPA), born 1934, Italian physicist: Nobel prize 1984.
  • serbia — a republic in S Europe since 2006; includes the autonomous province of Vojvodina and claims sovereignty over the autonomous province of Kosovo, which has declared itself independent; formerly part of Yugoslavia, in the N part: a former kingdom in S Europe. 34,116 sq. mi. (88,360 sq. km). Capital: Belgrade.
  • tabari — Muhammad ibn Jarir al-. 838–923 ad, Arab scholar, whose works include a history of the world from the Creation to 915 ad and a commentary on the Koran
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