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9-letter words containing b, a, l, e, s

  • snowblade — one of a pair of short skis used without poles
  • spareable — to refrain from harming or destroying; leave uninjured; forbear to punish, hurt, or destroy: to spare one's enemy.
  • speakable — to utter words or articulate sounds with the ordinary voice; talk: He was too ill to speak.
  • speedball — a game similar to soccer with the chief difference that a player catching the ball on the fly can pass it with the hands.
  • spendable — available for spending.
  • spillable — to cause or allow to run or fall from a container, especially accidentally or wastefully: to spill a bag of marbles; to spill milk.
  • spoilable — able to be spoiled
  • sportable — capable of being sported or used in sport
  • spottable — a rounded mark or stain made by foreign matter, as mud, blood, paint, ink, etc.; a blot or speck.
  • squabbled — to engage in a petty quarrel.
  • stabilate — a collection of living organisms, gathered on one occasion and preserved for a particular use
  • stabilise — to make or hold stable, firm, or steadfast.
  • stabilize — to make or hold stable, firm, or steadfast.
  • stableboy — a person who works in a stable.
  • stableman — a person who works in a stable.
  • stackable — capable of being stacked, especially easily: stackable chairs.
  • stageable — (of a play, musical, etc) capable of or suitable for being staged
  • stealable — to take (the property of another or others) without permission or right, especially secretly or by force: A pickpocket stole his watch.
  • stickable — to pierce or puncture with something pointed, as a pin, dagger, or spear; stab: to stick one's finger with a needle.
  • stoppable — capable of being stopped.
  • strikable — being cause for a strike, as by union members: strikable labor issues.
  • strokable — appearing pleasant to stroke
  • stub axle — a short axle that carries one of the front steered wheels of a motor vehicle and is capable of limited angular movement about a kingpin
  • studiable — application of the mind to the acquisition of knowledge, as by reading, investigation, or reflection: long hours of study.
  • stylobate — a course of masonry, part of the stereobate, forming the foundation for a colonnade, especially the outermost colonnade.
  • sub-ideal — a conception of something in its perfection.
  • subaerial — located or occurring on the surface of the earth.
  • subalpine — pertaining to the regions at the foot of the Alps.
  • subaltern — lower in rank; subordinate: a subaltern employee.
  • subcellar — a cellar below the main cellar.
  • subclause — Grammar. a syntactic construction containing a subject and predicate and forming part of a sentence or constituting a whole simple sentence.
  • subdealer — a dealer who buys from another dealer
  • subdermal — situated or lying under the skin, as tissue.
  • subhalide — a halide containing a relatively small proportion of the halogen, as mercurous chloride.
  • subhedral — (of mineral grains comprising igneous rocks) having a partial or incomplete crystal face or form.
  • sublethal — almost lethal or fatal: a sublethal dose of poison.
  • sublimate — Psychology. to divert the energy of (a sexual or other biological impulse) from its immediate goal to one of a more acceptable social, moral, or aesthetic nature or use.
  • sublinear — of, consisting of, or using lines: linear design.
  • sublunate — almost crescent-shaped
  • subluxate — to partially dislocate
  • submental — situated beneath the chin
  • subneural — beneath or below a nerve
  • subniveal — beneath the snow
  • subsample — a specimen from or a small part of a sample.
  • subverbal — of or relating to words: verbal ability.
  • superable — capable of being overcome; surmountable.
  • superably — capable of being overcome; surmountable.
  • syllabize — to syllabify.
  • syllables — an uninterrupted segment of speech consisting of a vowel sound, a diphthong, or a syllabic consonant, with or without preceding or following consonant sounds: “Eye,” “sty,” “act,” and “should” are English words of one syllable. “Eyelet,” “stifle,” “enact,” and “shouldn't” are two-syllable words.
  • table saw — a circular saw mounted on the underside of a table through which its blade projects: work to be sawed is placed on the table
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