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9-letter words containing a, b, n, d

  • abandoned — An abandoned place or building is no longer used or occupied.
  • abandonee — a person to whom something is formally relinquished, esp an insurer having the right to salvage a wreck
  • abandoner — a person or thing that abandons
  • abdominal — Abdominal is used to describe something that is situated in the abdomen or forms part of it.
  • abducting — Present participle of abduct.
  • abduction — the act of taking someone away by force or cunning; kidnapping
  • abidingly — In an abiding manner; permanently. (First attested around 1350 to 1470.).
  • abnegated — Simple past tense and past participle of abnegate.
  • abodement — a sign that something good or bad is about to happen
  • abondance — (card games) Alternative form of abundance.
  • aboundant — Obsolete spelling of abundant (14th–17th centuries).
  • abounding — to occur or exist in great quantities or numbers: a stream in which trout abound.
  • abridging — to shorten by omissions while retaining the basic contents: to abridge a reference book.
  • absconded — Leave hurriedly and secretly, typically to avoid detection of or arrest for an unlawful action such as theft.
  • abscondee — a person who absconds; absconder.
  • absconder — to depart in a sudden and secret manner, especially to avoid capture and legal prosecution: The cashier absconded with the money.
  • abstained — to hold oneself back voluntarily, especially from something regarded as improper or unhealthy (usually followed by from): to abstain from eating meat.
  • abuilding — in the process of being built or building
  • abundance — An abundance of something is a large quantity of it.
  • abundancy — A state of plentifulness. (First attested in the mid 16th century.).
  • abundaunt — Obsolete form of abundant.
  • adlibbing — to improvise all or part of (a speech, a piece of music, etc.): to ad-lib one's lines.
  • adsorbant — Adsorbent.
  • adsorbent — capable of adsorption
  • adsorbing — Present participle of adsorb.
  • adumbrant — Giving a faint shadow, or slight resemblance; shadowing forth.
  • air-bound — stopped up by air.
  • albondiga — A Spanish or Latin American variety of meatball.
  • aldebaran — a binary star, one component of which is a red giant, the brightest star in the constellation Taurus. It appears in the sky close to the star cluster Hyades. Visual magnitude: 0.85; spectral type: K5III; distance: 65 light years
  • amendable — to alter, modify, rephrase, or add to or subtract from (a motion, bill, constitution, etc.) by formal procedure: Congress may amend the proposed tax bill.
  • anabantid — any of various spiny-finned fishes constituting the family Anabantidae and including the fighting fish, climbing perch, and gourami
  • angel bed — French Furniture. a bed having a suspended or bracketed canopy of less than full length. Compare duchesse bed.
  • anybodies — a person of some importance: If you're anybody, you'll receive an invitation.
  • ash blond — a very light blond colour
  • ash-blond — pale, grayish blond: ash-blond hair.
  • aurobindoSri (Sri Aurobindo Ghose) 1872–1950, Indian scholar and spiritual leader.
  • baby bond — a sum of money invested shortly after the birth of a child, the returns of which may not be collected until the child reaches adulthood
  • back down — If you back down, you withdraw a claim, demand, or commitment that you made earlier, because other people are strongly opposed to it.
  • back-wind — to divert wind against the lee side of (a sail) from another sail.
  • backbends — Plural form of backbend.
  • backboned — With a strong spine.
  • backdowns — Plural form of backdown.
  • backhands — Plural form of backhand.
  • backlands — Plural form of backland.
  • backround — Misspelling of background.
  • bad lands — a deeply eroded barren region of SW South Dakota and NW Nebraska
  • bad thing — (jargon)   (From the 1930 Sellar & Yeatman parody "1066 And All That") Something that can't possibly result in improvement of the subject. This term is always capitalised, as in "Replacing all of the 9600-baud modems with bicycle couriers would be a Bad Thing". Opposite: Good Thing. British correspondents confirm that Bad Thing and Good Thing (and probably therefore Right Thing and Wrong Thing) come from the book referenced in the etymology, which discusses rulers who were Good Kings but Bad Things. This has apparently created a mainstream idiom on the British side of the pond.
  • bada-bing — an expression used to suggest that something can be done with no difficulty or delay
  • badgering — any of various burrowing, carnivorous mammals of the family Mustelidae, as Taxidea taxus, of North America, and Meles meles, of Europe and Asia.
  • badinages — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of badinage.

On this page, we collect all 9-letter words with A-B-N-D. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 9-letter word that contains in A-B-N-D to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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