8-letter words containing a, r, b, k
- bedarken — to make dark, to cover in darkness
- bedmaker — a person who constructs beds
- berakhah — a blessing or benediction, usually recited according to a traditional formula.
- bestreak — to streak
- bierkase — a semisoft, strong white cow's-milk cheese that originated in Germany, and is eaten especially with beer.
- bismarck — a city in North Dakota, on the Missouri River: the state capital. Pop: 56 344 (2003 est)
- blackmur — R(ichard) P(almer) 1904–65, U.S. critic and poet.
- blinkard — an idiot or stupid person
- blowkart — a simple wheeled vehicle such as a go-kart which has been fitted with a sail and is powered by the wind
- bockscar — the U.S. B-29 bomber that dropped the atom bomb on Nagasaki, Japan, on Aug. 9, 1945.
- bookmark — A bookmark is a narrow piece of card or leather that you put between the pages of a book so that you can find a particular page easily.
- bookrack — a rack for holding books
- brackets — a support, as of metal or wood, projecting from a wall or the like to hold or bear the weight of a shelf, part of a cornice, etc.
- brackish — Brackish water is slightly salty and unpleasant.
- braddock — Edward1695-1755; Brit. general, born in Scotland: commander of the Brit. forces in the French & Indian War
- brakeage — the braking power of a vehicle, esp a train
- brakeman — a crew member of a goods or passenger train. His duties include controlling auxiliary braking power and inspecting the train
- branking — to hold up and toss the head, as a horse when spurning the bit or prancing.
- bratpack — a group of precocious and successful young actors, writers, etc
- break in — If someone, usually a thief, breaks in, they get into a building by force.
- break up — When something breaks up or when you break it up, it separates or is divided into several smaller parts.
- break-in — an illegal entry into a home, car, office, etc.
- breakage — Breakage is the act of breaking something.
- breaking — (in Old English, Old Norse, etc) the change of a vowel into a diphthong
- breakoff — an abrupt discontinuance, especially of relations
- breakout — If there has been a break-out, someone has escaped from prison.
- brickbat — Brickbats are very critical or insulting remarks which are made in public about someone or something.
- brinkman — a person who practises brinkmanship
- britpack — a group of young and successful British actors, directors, artists, etc
- bro talk — Māori English
- brockage — a defect or fault imposed on a coin during its minting.
- buckaroo — a cowboy
- buckrake — a large rake for agricultural use, often attached to a tractor
- bukharin — Nikolai Ivanovich (nikaˈlaj iˈvanəvitʃ). 1888–1938, Soviet Bolshevik leader: executed in one of Stalin's purges
- byrlakin — a mild oath
- cab rank — an area, often specially designated, where taxis wait to pick up passengers
- cambrick — Obsolete form of cambric.
- crablike — resembling a crab, esp in movement
- cryobank — a facility for storing living tissue, such as sperm, embryos, cells, etc, at a low temperature
- dark web — the portion of the Internet that is intentionally hidden from search engines, uses masked IP addresses, and is accessible only with a special web browser: part of the deep web.
- daybreak — Daybreak is the time in the morning when light first appears.
- debarked — Simple past tense and past participle of debark.
- debarker — a machine that strips bark from logs
- debeaker — to remove the upper beak from (a bird) to prevent egg eating or attacks on other birds.
- diarbekr — Diyarbakir.
- drawback — a hindrance or disadvantage; an undesirable or objectionable feature.
- dropback — a lowering, as of prices or standards, especially to a previous level: Auto manufacturers requested a dropback in emissions standards.
- embanker — a person who makes an embankment
- embarked — Go on board a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle.
- embarkee — One who embarks on a vessel such as a ship or plane.