0%

9-letter words containing b, c, h

  • botchedly — in a botched or clumsy manner
  • bow shock — the shock front along which the solar wind encounters a planet's magnetic field.
  • box lunch — A box lunch is food, for example sandwiches, which you take to work, to school, or on a trip and eat as your lunch.
  • brachiate — having widely divergent paired branches
  • branchery — a group or system of branches
  • branchiae — the gills of an aquatic animal
  • branchial — of or relating to the gills of an aquatic animal, esp a fish
  • branching — the occurrence of several decay paths (branches) in the disintegration of a particular nuclide or the de-excitation of an excited atom. The branching fraction (nuclear) or branching ratio (atomic) is the proportion of the disintegrating nuclei that follow a particular branch to the total number of disintegrating nuclides
  • branchio- — gills
  • branchlet — a small branch
  • brash ice — small, floating fragments of sea ice or river ice.
  • breaching — the act or a result of breaking; break or rupture.
  • brechtian — Bertolt [ber-tawlt] /ˈbɛr tɔlt/ (Show IPA), 1898–1956, German dramatist and poet.
  • breeching — the strap of a harness that passes behind a horse's haunches
  • broach to — to turn or swing so that the beam faces the waves and wind and there is danger of swamping or capsizing
  • broachers — Machinery. an elongated, tapered, serrated cutting tool for shaping and enlarging holes.
  • brochette — a skewer or small spit, used for holding pieces of meat, etc, while roasting or grilling
  • bronchial — Bronchial means affecting or concerned with the bronchial tubes.
  • bronchium — a medium-sized bronchial tube
  • brunching — a meal that serves as both breakfast and lunch.
  • brush cut — crew cut
  • brushback — a pitch that narrowly misses the batter
  • brythonic — the S group of Celtic languages, consisting of Welsh, Cornish, and Breton
  • bucharest — the capital of Romania, in the southeast. Pop: 1 764 000 (2005 est)
  • buck moth — a saturniid moth, Hemileuca maia, having delicate, grayish wings with a white band.
  • buckbrush — a flowering American shrub, Andrachne phyllantoides, of the family Euphorbiaceae
  • buckhound — a hound, smaller than a staghound, used for hunting the smaller breeds of deer, esp fallow deer
  • buckishly — in a buckish manner
  • buckteeth — a projecting tooth, especially an upper front tooth.
  • buckthorn — any of several thorny small-flowered shrubs of the genus Rhamnus, esp the Eurasian species R. cathartica, whose berries were formerly used as a purgative: family Rhamnaceae
  • bucktooth — a projecting upper front tooth
  • buckwheat — Buckwheat is a type of small black grain used for feeding animals and making flour. Buckwheat also refers to the flour itself.
  • bullfinch — A bullfinch is a type of small European bird. The male has a black head and a pinkish-red breast.
  • bullwhack — to flog with a short whip
  • bush coat — a belted, hip-length, shirtlike jacket, usually with four patch pockets and a notched collar, adapted from the hunting coat customarily worn in the African bush.
  • bushcraft — ability and experience in matters concerned with living in the bush
  • bushwhack — to ambush
  • butcher's — a look
  • butchered — a retail or wholesale dealer in meat.
  • butcherer — a person who butchers
  • butcherly — of or resembling a butcher
  • butchness — the state of being butch
  • by chance — Something that happens by chance was not planned by anyone.
  • by choice — willingly, of one's free will
  • by inches — a unit of length, 1/12 (0.0833) foot, equivalent to 2.54 centimeters.
  • cabochons — Plural form of cabochon.
  • carbachol — a cholinergic agent, C6H15ClN2O2, used for various ophthalmic purposes, such as the treating of glaucoma
  • cash-book — a journal in which all cash or cheque receipts and disbursements are recorded
  • cashbooks — Plural form of cashbook.
  • catchable — to seize or capture, especially after pursuit: to catch a criminal; to catch a runaway horse.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?