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9-letter words containing a, r, l, e

  • austerely — severe in manner or appearance; uncompromising; strict; forbidding: an austere teacher.
  • autoflare — a computer-operated, automatic landing system in an aircraft
  • autoreply — a facility for sending automated replies to email messages
  • averagely — a quantity, rating, or the like that represents or approximates an arithmetic mean: Her golf average is in the 90s. My average in science has gone from B to C this semester.
  • averrable — able to be proved or verified
  • avertable — Preventable.
  • avertedly — in an averted or offended manner
  • avertible — Capable of being averted; preventable.
  • avirulent — (esp of bacteria) not virulent
  • awardable — Capable of being awarded.
  • aylesbury — a town in SE central England, administrative centre of Buckinghamshire. Pop: 69 021 (2001)
  • baal kore — an official in the synagogue, as a cantor, who reads the weekly portion of the Torah.
  • bachelors — Plural form of bachelor.
  • bachelour — Obsolete form of bachelor.
  • bacterial — Bacterial is used to describe things that relate to or are caused by bacteria.
  • bairnlike — childlike
  • balakirev — Mily Alexeyevich (ˈmilij alɪkˈsjejɪvitʃ). 1837–1910, Russian composer, whose works include two symphonic poems, two symphonies, and many arrangements of Russian folk songs
  • balancers — Plural form of balancer.
  • balikesir — city in NW Asiatic Turkey: pop. 173,000
  • ball fern — a feathery fern, Davallia trichomanoides, of Malaysia, having rhizomes covered with toothed scales.
  • ball race — a ball bearing
  • balladeer — a singer of ballads
  • balladier — a person who sings ballads.
  • ballaster — someone who supplies ballast for a ship; someone who ballasts
  • ballerina — A ballerina is a woman ballet dancer.
  • ballister — (obsolete) A crossbow.
  • balloters — Plural form of balloter.
  • baltimore — a port in N Maryland, on Chesapeake Bay. Pop: 628 670 (2003 est)
  • balusters — Plural form of baluster.
  • balzarine — a light cotton and wool fabric used for dress-making
  • band-role — a small flag or streamer fastened to a lance, masthead, etc.
  • bandalore — an old-fashioned type of yo-yo
  • bandelierAdolph Francis Alphonse, 1840–1914, U.S. anthropologist, archaeologist, and historian, born in Switzerland.
  • banderole — a long narrow flag, usually with forked ends, esp one attached to the masthead of a ship; pennant
  • bandoleer — a broad belt worn over one shoulder and across the chest, with pockets for carrying ammunition, etc.
  • bandolero — a highwayman; a robber
  • bandolier — a soldier's broad shoulder belt having small pockets or loops for cartridges
  • bangalore — a city in S India, capital of Karnataka state: printing, textiles, pharmaceuticals. Pop: 4 292 223 (2001)
  • bannerols — Plural form of bannerol.
  • bar gemel — a charge consisting of two barrulets separated by an area the width of a barrulet.
  • barbastel — a type of insectivorous forest bat, Barbastellus communis, native to Europe and known for its hairy lips
  • barbicels — Plural form of barbicel.
  • barcarole — a Venetian boat song in a time of six or twelve quaver beats to the bar
  • barcelona — the chief port of Spain, on the NE Mediterranean coast: seat of the Republican government during the Civil War (1936–39); the commercial capital of Spain. Pop: 1 582 738 (2003 est)
  • barebelly — a sheep with a defective growth of wool on its belly and legs.
  • bargepole — a long pole used to propel a barge
  • barklouse — any of numerous insects of the order Psocoptera that live on the bark of trees and other plants.
  • barnacled — any marine crustacean of the subclass Cirripedia, usually having a calcareous shell, being either stalked (goose barnacle) and attaching itself to ship bottoms and floating timber, or stalkless (rock barnacle or acorn barnacle) and attaching itself to rocks, especially in the intertidal zone.
  • barnacles — nose pincers for controlling an unruly horse
  • barophile — An organism that lives and thrives under high barometric pressure; a form of extremophile.
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