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10-letter words containing b, a, r, e, i

  • brickmaker — a person who makes bricks
  • bridalveil — a waterfall in Yosemite National Park, California. 620 feet (189 meters) high.
  • bridesmaid — A bridesmaid is a woman or a girl who helps and accompanies a bride on her wedding day.
  • bridezilla — a woman whose behaviour in planning the details of her wedding is regarded as intolerable
  • bridgeable — a structure spanning and providing passage over a river, chasm, road, or the like.
  • bridgehead — A bridgehead is a good position which an army has taken in the enemy's territory and from which it can advance or attack.
  • bridgetalk — (language)   A visual language.
  • bridgewall — (in a furnace or boiler) a transverse baffle that serves to deflect products of combustion.
  • bridgwater — a town in SW England, in central Somerset. Pop: 36 563 (2001)
  • brigandage — plundering by brigands
  • brigandine — a coat of mail, invented in the Middle Ages to increase mobility, consisting of metal rings or sheets sewn on to cloth or leather
  • brigantine — a two-masted sailing ship, rigged square on the foremast and fore-and-aft with square topsails on the mainmast
  • brilliance — great brightness; radiance
  • brilliante — with spirit; lively
  • brix scale — a scale for calibrating hydrometers used for measuring the concentration and density of sugar solutions at a given temperature
  • broadpiece — an English coin replaced by the guinea in 1663
  • brunfelsia — any of various shrubs or small trees belonging to the genus Brunfelsia, of the nightshade family, native to tropical America, having white or purple tubular or bell-shaped flowers.
  • budgerigar — Budgerigars are small, brightly-coloured birds from Australia that people often keep as pets.
  • burglarize — If a building is burglarized, a thief enters it by force and steals things.
  • burlingameAnson [an-suh n] /ˈæn sən/ (Show IPA), 1820–70, U.S. diplomat.
  • cabin crew — The cabin crew on an aircraft are the people whose job is to look after the passengers.
  • cabineteer — (sometimes initial capital letter) a member of a governmental cabinet.
  • cabriolets — Plural form of cabriolet.
  • calibrated — marked with units
  • calibrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of calibrate.
  • carabineer — a soldier armed with a carbine
  • carabinero — a Chilean police officer
  • carabiners — Plural form of carabiner.
  • carabinier — (formerly) a soldier armed with a carbine.
  • carbineers — Plural form of carbineer.
  • carbolised — phenolate (def 2).
  • carbolized — Simple past tense and past participle of carbolize.
  • carbonised — Alternative spelling of carbonized.
  • carbonized — Simple past tense and past participle of carbonize.
  • carbonizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of carbonize.
  • carborexic — a person who is regarded as being obsessed with reducing their carbon footprint
  • carburized — Simple past tense and past participle of carburize.
  • chainbrake — a device for cutting off the power to a chainsaw if the saw kicks back
  • chairborne — having an administrative or desk job rather than a more active one
  • chambering — a room, usually private, in a house or apartment, especially a bedroom: She retired to her chamber.
  • chamberlin — ˈThomas Chrowder (ˈkraʊdər ) ; krouˈdər) 1843-1928; U.S. geologist
  • chambertin — a dry red burgundy wine produced in Gevrey-Chambertin in E France
  • charitable — A charitable organization or activity helps and supports people who are ill, very poor, or who have a disability.
  • cherubical — Cherubic.
  • chiffarobe — Alternative form of chifforobe.
  • chinaberry — a spreading Asian meliaceous tree, Melia azedarach, widely grown in the US for its ornamental white or purple flowers and beadlike yellow fruits
  • cibachrome — the old name for the Ilfochrome photographic printing process
  • circulable — able to be circulated
  • city break — a short holiday spent in a city
  • clambering — of or relating to plants that creep or climb like vines, but without benefit of tendrils.
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