7-letter words containing a, m, b
- jambeux — (historical) mediaeval armour for the legs below the knees.
- jambier — a greave
- jambiya — an Arabian knife having a curved, double-edged blade, usually with a central rib.
- jambone — a lone hand in euchre that is played while a player's cards are exposed on the table
- jobname — the title of a position or job
- kalimba — mbira.
- kimball — a male given name.
- kumbaya — The title of the etymological folk song, used with varying degrees of sincerity or sarcasm to refer to the song's evocations of spiritual unity and interpersonal harmony.
- labarum — an ecclesiastical standard or banner, as for carrying in procession.
- lambada — a Brazilian ballroom dance for couples, with gyrating movements and close interlocking of the partners.
- lambast — to beat or whip severely.
- lambdas — Plural form of lambda.
- lambent — running or moving lightly over a surface: lambent tongues of flame.
- lambert — Constant [kon-stuh nt] /ˈkɒn stənt/ (Show IPA), 1905–51, English composer and conductor.
- lambeth — a borough of Greater London, England.
- lambing — a young sheep.
- lambkin — a little lamb.
- lamboys — a skirt-like piece of armour made from metal strips
- limbate — bordered, as a flower in which one color is surrounded by an edging of another.
- lombard — Carole (Jane Alice Peters) 1909?–42, U.S. film actress.
- lumbago — pain in the lower, or lumbar, region of the back or loins, especially chronic or recurring pain.
- lumbang — a euphorbiaceous tree, Aleurites mollucana, the fruits of which yield tung oil
- lumumba — Patrice (Emergy) [puh-trees em-er-zhee] /pəˈtris ˌɛm ɛrˈʒi/ (Show IPA), 1925–61, African political leader: premier of the Democratic Republic of the Congo 1960–61.
- macaber — gruesome and horrifying; ghastly; horrible.
- macabre — gruesome and horrifying; ghastly; horrible.
- macbeth — died 1057, king of Scotland 1040–57.
- macumba — a Brazilian cult incorporating the use of fetishes and sorcery and deriving largely from African practices.
- maghreb — the Arabic name for the NW part of Africa, generally including Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and sometimes Libya.
- mahaleb — a cherry, Prunus mahaleb, introduced into the U.S. from Eurasia, used as a stock in grafting cherries.
- mailbag — a large bag used by mail carriers for carrying mail, usually equipped with a shoulder strap.
- mailbox — a public box in which mail is placed for pickup and delivery by the post office.
- mainbol — (language) MAcro ImplementatioN of SNOBOL4.
- makable — Capable of being made.
- mamboed — Simple past tense and past participle of mambo.
- man-bag — a small bag, usually with a shoulder strap, carried by a man and designed to contain personal articles
- man-bun — a man’s hair gathered into a bun at the back or top of the head.
- manband — an all-male vocal pop group which was formed as a boy band, but whose members have reached maturity
- manbote — a sum of money paid to a lord whose vassal was murdered.
- marabou — any of three large storks of the genus Leptoptilus, of Africa or the East Indies, having soft, downy feathers under the wings and tail that are used for making a furlike trimming for women's hats and garments.
- marbled — Having a streaked and patterned appearance like that of variegated marble.
- marbler — Someone who works with marble.
- marbles — metamorphosed limestone, consisting chiefly of recrystallized calcite or dolomite, capable of taking a high polish, occurring in a wide range of colors and variegations and used in sculpture and architecture.
- marburg — a city in central Germany.
- maribor — a city in N Slovenia, on the Drava River.
- marimba — a musical instrument, originating in Africa but popularized and modified in Central America, consisting of a set of graduated wooden bars, often with resonators beneath to reinforce the sound, struck with mallets.
- marybud — a bud of a marigold
- masbate — one of the central islands of the Philippines. 1262 sq. mi. (3269 sq. km).
- mastaba — an ancient Egyptian tomb made of mud brick, rectangular in plan with sloping sides and a flat roof.
- mathlab — Symbolic math system, MITRE, 1964. Later version: MATHLAB 68 (PDP-6, 1967).
- maybeck — Bernard, 1862–1957, U.S. architect.