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7-letter words containing a, d, r, e

  • assured — Someone who is assured is very confident and relaxed.
  • asterid — a clade or variety of flowering plant
  • astride — If you sit or stand astride something, you sit or stand with one leg on each side of it.
  • asunder — If something tears or is torn asunder, it is violently separated into two or more parts or pieces.
  • atreids — a dynasty of rulers of ancient Mycenae, whose members included Atreus
  • atridae — a collective name for Agamemnon and Menelaus, the sons of Atreus
  • attired — If you describe how someone is attired, you are describing how they are dressed.
  • augured — an excessively talkative person.
  • aurated — combined with auric acid
  • aurides — Plural form of auride.
  • averred — to assert or affirm with confidence; declare in a positive or peremptory manner.
  • averted — to turn away or aside: to avert one's eyes.
  • avodire — a yellow hardwood from an African tree
  • avoider — to keep away from; keep clear of; shun: to avoid a person; to avoid taxes; to avoid danger.
  • awarded — to give as due or merited; assign or bestow: to award prizes.
  • awardee — the recipient of an award.
  • awarder — to give as due or merited; assign or bestow: to award prizes.
  • axebird — a nightjar of northern Queensland and New Guinea with a cry that sounds like a chopping axe
  • axelrod — Julius. 1912–2004, US neuropharmacologist, renowned for his work on catecholamines. Nobel prize for physiology or medicine (with von Euler and Bernard Katz) 1970
  • b-grade — A B-grade person or thing is one that you consider to be inferior or of poor quality.
  • badders — (UK, informal) badminton.
  • badgers — Plural form of badger.
  • banders — a thin, flat strip of some material for binding, confining, trimming, protecting, etc.: a band on each bunch of watercress.
  • bandore — a 16th-century plucked musical instrument resembling a lute but larger and fitted with seven pairs of metal strings
  • barcode — a machine-readable arrangement of numbers and parallel lines of different widths printed on a package, which can be electronically scanned at a checkout to register the price of the goods and to activate computer stock-checking and reordering
  • bardeen — John. 1908–91, US physicist and electrical engineer, noted for his research on electrical conduction in solids; shared Nobel prize for physics 1956 for research on semiconductors leading to the invention of the transistor; shared Nobel prize for physics 1972 for contributions to the theory of superconductivity
  • bartend — to work as a bartender
  • basterd — Misspelling of bastard.
  • bawdier — Comparative form of bawdy.
  • bearded — A bearded man has a beard.
  • bearden — Romare Howard [roh-mair] /ˈroʊ mɛər/ (Show IPA), 1911–88, U.S. artist.
  • beardie — a bearded collie
  • bedrail — a rail or board along the side of a bed that connects the headboard with the footboard
  • bedrape — to drape, adorn
  • bedward — towards bed
  • bedwarf — to greatly hamper the growth of
  • beghard — a member of a Christian brotherhood that was founded in Flanders in the 13th century and followed a life based on that of the Beguines
  • belgard — a loving gaze
  • beograd — Belgrade
  • berated — to scold; rebuke: He berated them in public.
  • bermuda — a UK Overseas Territory consisting of a group of over 150 coral islands (the Bermudas) in the NW Atlantic: discovered in about 1503, colonized by the British by 1612, although not acquired by the British crown until 1684. Capital: Hamilton. Pop: 69 467 (2013 est). Area: 53 sq km (20 sq miles)
  • bernard — Claude (klod). 1813–78, French physiologist, noted for his research on the action of secretions of the alimentary canal and the glycogenic function of the liver
  • betread — to tread upon
  • bladder — Your bladder is the part of your body where urine is stored until it leaves your body.
  • blander — pleasantly gentle or agreeable: a bland, affable manner.
  • bleared — made dim or blurred by tiredness or tears
  • boarded — a piece of wood sawed thin, and of considerable length and breadth compared with the thickness.
  • boarder — A boarder is a pupil who lives at school during the term.
  • bogarde — Sir Dirk, real name Derek Jules Gaspard Ulric Niven van den Bogaerde. 1920–99, British film actor and writer: his films include The Servant (1963) and Death in Venice (1970). His writings include the autobiographical A Postillion Struck by Lightning (1977) and the novel A Period of Adjustment (1994)
  • bradded — having brads.
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