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6-letter words containing b, a, r, l

  • brazil — the red wood obtained from various tropical leguminous trees of the genus Caesalpinia, such as C. echinata of America: used for cabinetwork
  • bridal — Bridal is used to describe something that belongs or relates to a bride, or to both a bride and her bridegroom.
  • brolga — a large grey Australian crane, Grus rubicunda, having a red-and-green head and a trumpeting call
  • bromal — a yellowish oily synthetic liquid formerly used medicinally as a sedative and hypnotic; tribromoacetaldehyde. Formula: Br3CCHO
  • brumal — of, characteristic of, or relating to winter; wintry
  • brutal — A brutal act or person is cruel and violent.
  • bulbar — of or relating to a bulb, esp the medulla oblongata
  • bulgar — a member of a group of non-Indo-European peoples that settled in SE Europe in the late 7th century ad and adopted the language and culture of their Slavonic subjects
  • burial — A burial is the act or ceremony of putting a dead body into a grave in the ground.
  • burlap — Burlap is a thick, rough fabric that is used for making sacks.
  • bursal — Anatomy, Zoology. a pouch, sac, or vesicle, especially a sac containing synovia, to facilitate motion, as between a tendon and a bone.
  • cabler — a cable broadcasting company
  • cabral — Pedro Álvares (ˈpɛːdru ˈɑlvərəʃ). ?1460–?1526, Portuguese navigator: discovered and took possession of Brazil for Portugal in 1500
  • drably — dull; cheerless; lacking in spirit, brightness, etc.
  • fabler — A writer of fables; a fabulist; a dealer in untruths or falsehoods.
  • garble — to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: to garble instructions.
  • glaber — Raoul [rah-ool] /rɑˈul/ (Show IPA), or Rudolphe [roo-dawlf] /ruˈdɔlf/ (Show IPA), c990–c1050, French ecclesiastic and chronicler.
  • herbal — of, relating to, or consisting of herbs.
  • labara — an ecclesiastical standard or banner, as for carrying in procession.
  • labors — Plural form of labor.
  • labour — productive activity, especially for the sake of economic gain.
  • labral — of or like a lip
  • labret — an ornament worn in a pierced hole in the lip.
  • labrid — any of numerous fishes of the family Labridae, including the wrasses, the tautog, and the cunner, and characterized chiefly by well-developed teeth and, often, brilliant colors.
  • labrum — a lip or liplike part.
  • labrys — A double-headed ax in Minoan mythology.
  • lamber — someone who tends to ewes and newborn lambs at lambing time
  • libera — an ancient Italian goddess of wine, vineyards, and fertility and the wife of Liber, in later times identified with Persephone.
  • librae — Plural form of libra.
  • libral — (obsolete) Of a pound in weight.
  • libran — a person born under the sign of Libra
  • lubras — Plural form of lubra.
  • lumbar — of or relating to the loin or loins.
  • marbleAlice, 1913–90, U.S. tennis player.
  • marbly — like marble in appearance, hardness, coldness, etc.
  • rabaul — the largest island in the Bismarck Archipelago, Papua New Guinea, in the W central Pacific Ocean. About 14,600 sq. mi. (37,814 sq. km). Capital: Rabaul.
  • rabble — a tool or mechanically operated device used for stirring or mixing a charge in a roasting furnace.
  • rambla — a dry ravine.
  • ramble — to wander around in a leisurely, aimless manner: They rambled through the shops until closing time.
  • ribald — vulgar or indecent in speech, language, etc.; coarsely mocking, abusive, or irreverent; scurrilous.
  • robalo — snook2 (def 1).
  • tribal — of, relating to, or characteristic of a tribe: tribal customs.
  • umbral — shade; shadow.
  • verbal — of or relating to words: verbal ability.
  • warble — to sing or whistle with trills, quavers, or melodic embellishments: The canary warbled most of the day.
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