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

  • brassier — made of or covered with brass.
  • brassish — like brass; brassy
  • bratling — a small badly-behaved child
  • brattain — Walter Houser. 1902–87, US physicist, who shared the Nobel prize for physics (1956) with W. B. Shockley and John Bardeen for their invention of the transistor
  • brattice — a partition of wood or treated cloth used to control ventilation in a mine
  • braunite — a brown or black mineral that consists of manganese oxide and silicate and is a source of manganese. Formula: 3Mn2O3.MnSiO3
  • brawling — a noisy quarrel, squabble, or fight.
  • brazilin — a pale yellow soluble crystalline solid, turning red in alkaline solution, extracted from brazil wood and sappanwood and used in dyeing and as an indicator. Formula: C16H14O5
  • breadbin — a household container for bread, usually quite small
  • breading — a kind of food made of flour or meal that has been mixed with milk or water, made into a dough or batter, with or without yeast or other leavening agent, and baked.
  • break in — If someone, usually a thief, breaks in, they get into a building by force.
  • break-in — an illegal entry into a home, car, office, etc.
  • breaking — (in Old English, Old Norse, etc) the change of a vowel into a diphthong
  • breaming — to clean (a ship's bottom) by applying burning furze, reeds, etc., to soften the pitch and loosen adherent matter.
  • breccial — of or relating to breccia
  • breviary — a book of psalms, hymns, prayers, etc, to be recited daily by clerics in major orders and certain members of religious orders as part of the divine office
  • breviate — a short account; a summary
  • briareus — a giant with a hundred arms and fifty heads who aided Zeus and the Olympians against the Titans
  • brickbat — Brickbats are very critical or insulting remarks which are made in public about someone or something.
  • bridally — in a manner appropriate for a bride
  • brideman — a male attendant of the bridegroom at a wedding
  • bridgman — Percy Williams. 1882–1961, US physicist: Nobel prize for physics (1946) for his work on high-pressure physics and thermodynamics
  • brigaded — a military unit having its own headquarters and consisting of two or more regiments, squadrons, groups, or battalions.
  • brigalow — any of various acacia trees
  • brigands — a bandit, especially one of a band of robbers in mountain or forest regions.
  • brigsail — a large gaffsail on the mainmast or trysail mast of a brig.
  • brinkman — a person who practises brinkmanship
  • brisance — the shattering effect or power of an explosion or explosive
  • brisbane — a port in E Australia, the capital of Queensland: founded in 1824 as a penal settlement; vast agricultural hinterland. Pop: 2 189 878 (2013)
  • britpack — a group of young and successful British actors, directors, artists, etc
  • brittany — a region of NW France, the peninsula between the English Channel and the Bay of Biscay: settled by Celtic refugees from Wales and Cornwall during the Anglo-Saxon invasions; disputed between England and France until 1364
  • broadish — fairly broad
  • brodiaea — any of several plants belonging to the genus Brodiaea, of the amaryllis family, native to western North America, having grasslike basal leaves and clusters of usually purplish flowers.
  • bromelia — any plant of the family Bromeliaceae of tropical American plants, characterized by a short stem and deeply cleft calyx
  • bronchia — the ramifications or branches of the bronchi.
  • brumaire — the month of mist: the second month of the French revolutionary calendar, extending from Oct 23 to Nov 21
  • bucrania — (in classical architecture) an ornament, especially on a frieze, having the form of the skull of an ox.
  • bukharin — Nikolai Ivanovich (nikaˈlaj iˈvanəvitʃ). 1888–1938, Soviet Bolshevik leader: executed in one of Stalin's purges
  • bulgaria — a republic in SE Europe, on the Balkan Peninsula on the Black Sea: under Turkish rule from 1395 until 1878; became an independent kingdom in 1908 and a republic in 1946; joined the EU in 2007; consists chiefly of the Danube valley in the north and the Balkan Mountains in the central part, separated from the Rhodope Mountains of the south by the valley of the Maritsa River. Language: Bulgarian. Religion: Christian (Bulgarian Orthodox) majority. Currency: lev. Capital: Sofia. Pop: 6 981 642 (2013 est). Area: 110 911 sq km (42 823 sq miles)
  • byrlakin — a mild oath
  • cabrilla — any of various serranid food fishes, esp Epinephelus analogus, occurring in warm seas around Florida and the Caribbean
  • cabrillo — Juan Rodríguez [rod-ree-ges] /rɒdˈri gɛs/ (Show IPA), (Joao Rodrigues Cabrilho) 1499?–1543, Spanish explorer, born in Portugal: discovered California.
  • cabriole — a type of furniture leg, popular in the first half of the 18th century, in which an upper convex curve descends tapering to a concave curve
  • cagebird — A bird kept in a cage.
  • calabria — a region of SW Italy: mostly mountainous and subject to earthquakes. Chief town: Reggio di Calabria. Pop: 2 007 392 (2003 est). Area: 15 080 sq km (5822 sq miles)
  • calibers — Plural form of caliber.
  • calibres — Plural form of calibre.
  • cambrian — of, denoting, or formed in the first 65 million years of the Palaeozoic era, during which marine invertebrates, esp trilobites, flourished
  • cambrick — Obsolete form of cambric.
  • capibara — a South American tailless rodent, Hydrochaeris hydrochaeris, living along the banks of rivers and lakes, having partly webbed feet: the largest living rodent.
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