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9-letter words containing b, a, r, e, o

  • beglamour — to endow with glamour
  • behaviors — manner of behaving or acting.
  • behaviour — People's or animals' behaviour is the way that they behave. You can refer to a typical and repeated way of behaving as a behaviour.
  • below par — If you say that someone or something is below par or under par, you are disappointed in them because they are below the standard you expected.
  • beriosova — Svetlana (svɪtˈlanə). 1932–98, British ballet dancer, born in Lithuania
  • beta iron — a nonmagnetic allotrope of pure iron stable between 770°C and 910°C
  • betrothal — A betrothal is an agreement to be married.
  • bezoardic — relating to bezoar
  • bigorexia — muscle dysmorphia.
  • biohermal — a carbonate rock formation, in the form of an ancient reef or hummock, consisting of the fossilized remains of corals, algae, mollusks, and other sedentary marine life, and commonly surrounded by rock of a different lithology.
  • biomarker — a distinct biochemical, genetic, or molecular characteristic or substance that is an indicator of a particular biological condition or process: a blood test to measure protein biomarkers for cancer.
  • bioparent — a biological parent
  • biopirate — a person who is responsible for biopiracy
  • blackmore — R(ichard) D(oddridge). 1825–1900, English novelist; author of Lorna Doone (1869)
  • bladework — skilful use of a blade, esp with reference to rowing
  • blepharo- — eyelid, eyelids
  • bloatware — computer software with an excessive number of unnecessary features and, often, unnecessarily high memory and disc space requirements
  • blue roan — a horse having a black coat sprinkled with white hairs
  • boanerges — a nickname applied by Jesus to James and John in Mark 3:17
  • boardlike — resembling a board
  • boat ride — a ride in a boat
  • bog paper — toilet paper
  • boilerman — a man who looks after boilers
  • bombarded — to attack or batter with artillery fire.
  • bombarder — a person or thing which bombards
  • bombaster — a person who stuffs or pads
  • bonaparte — Jérôme (ʒerom), brother of Napoleon I. 1784–1860, king of Westphalia (1807–13)
  • boogerman — South Midland and Southern U.S. bogeyman.
  • bookmaker — A bookmaker is a person whose job is to take your money when you bet and to pay you money if you win.
  • bookpaper — the paper used in printing books, especially when of superior quality.
  • boomerang — A boomerang is a curved piece of wood which comes back to you if you throw it in the correct way. Boomerangs were first used by the people who were living in Australia when Europeans arrived there.
  • bootmaker — a person who makes boots and shoes for a living
  • bordelais — a wine-growing region in SW France, in Gironde.
  • bordereau — a memorandum or invoice prepared for a company by an underwriter, containing a list of reinsured risks
  • borgesian — of Jorge Luis Borges or his works
  • bosberaad — a meeting in an isolated venue to break a political deadlock
  • botanizer — a person who botanizes
  • botmaster — (chat)   The owner of a bot.
  • boulanger — Georges (ʒɔrʒ). 1837–91, French general and minister of war (1886–87). Accused of attempting a coup d'état, he fled to Belgium, where he committed suicide
  • boulevard — A boulevard is a wide street in a city, usually with trees along each side.
  • bourasque — a tempest
  • box frame — Architecture. a monolithic reinforced-concrete structure having walls and floors in the form of slabs.
  • boy racer — British journalists sometimes refer to young men who drive very fast, especially in expensive and powerful cars, as boy racers.
  • bracteole — a secondary bract subtending a flower within an inflorescence
  • bradenton — a city in W Florida.
  • brazelton — Brazelton behavioral scale: a test widely used to evaluate infants' responses to environmental stimuli.
  • breadroom — a room or compartment where bread is kept, esp on a ship
  • breadroot — a leguminous plant, Psoralea esculenta, of central North America, having an edible starchy root
  • break off — If part of something breaks off or if you break it off, it comes off or is removed by force.
  • break out — If something such as war, fighting, or disease breaks out, it begins suddenly.
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