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7-letter words containing b, e, d, o

  • bockedy — (of a structure, piece of furniture, etc) unsteady
  • bodeful — portentous, foreboding, ominous
  • bogarde — Sir Dirk, real name Derek Jules Gaspard Ulric Niven van den Bogaerde. 1920–99, British film actor and writer: his films include The Servant (1963) and Death in Venice (1970). His writings include the autobiographical A Postillion Struck by Lightning (1977) and the novel A Period of Adjustment (1994)
  • boggled — to overwhelm or bewilder, as with the magnitude, complexity, or abnormality of: The speed of light boggles the mind.
  • boldest — not hesitating or fearful in the face of actual or possible danger or rebuff; courageous and daring: a bold hero.
  • bolixed — to do (something) badly; bungle (often followed by up): His interference bollixed up the whole deal.
  • bondage — Bondage is the condition of being someone's property and having to work for them.
  • bondmen — a male slave.
  • boodler — a person involved in bribery or corruption
  • bookend — Bookends are a pair of supports used to hold a row of books in an upright position by placing one at each end of the row.
  • borders — administrative division of S Scotland, on the English border: 1,800 sq mi (4,662 sq km); pop. 101,000
  • bordure — the outer edge of a shield, esp when decorated distinctively
  • boredom — Boredom is the state of being bored.
  • bosomed — having a (specified kind of) bosom
  • botched — bungled or mishandled
  • bottled — Bottled gas is kept under pressure in special metal cylinders which can be moved from one place to another.
  • boughed — having a bough or boughs (usually used in combination): golden-boughed elms.
  • boulder — A boulder is a large rounded rock.
  • bounded — (of a set) having a bound, esp where a measure is defined in terms of which all the elements of the set, or the differences between all pairs of members, are less than some value, or else all its members lie within some other well-defined set
  • bounden — morally obligatory (archaic except in the phrase bounden duty)
  • bounder — If you call a man a bounder, you mean he behaves in an unkind, deceitful, or selfish way.
  • bourder — a person who jests or jokes
  • boutade — an outburst; sally
  • bowhead — a large-mouthed arctic whale, Balaena mysticetus, that has become rare through overfishing but is now a protected species
  • bowlder — boulder
  • box bed — a bed completely enclosed so as to resemble a box.
  • boxhead — a heading, usually atthe top of a page, newspaper column, or column of figures, enclosed in a box formed by rules.
  • broaden — When something broadens, it becomes wider.
  • broader — of great breadth: The river was too broad to swim across.
  • brocade — Brocade is a thick, expensive material, often made of silk, with a raised pattern on it.
  • brocked — having different colours; variegated
  • broddle — to poke or pierce (something)
  • broider — to embroider
  • bromide — Bromide is a drug which used to be given to people to calm their nerves when they were worried or upset.
  • bronzed — Someone who is bronzed is attractively brown because they have been in the sun.
  • brooded — a number of young produced or hatched at one time; a family of offspring or young.
  • brooder — an enclosure or other structure, usually heated, used for rearing young chickens or other fowl
  • brooked — to bear; suffer; tolerate: I will brook no interference.
  • broomed — an implement for sweeping, consisting of a brush of straw or stiff strands of synthetic material bound tightly to the end of a long handle.
  • browderEarl Russell, 1891–1973, U.S. Communist Party leader 1930–45.
  • cobbled — A cobbled street has a surface made of cobblestones.
  • codable — capable of being coded
  • debbora — Deborah (def 1).
  • debitor — the heading written at the top of the debit column in an accounts book
  • deblock — (computing) To separate the logical records that have been combined into a physical block for storage.
  • deboard — To exit a form of transportation such as a boat, ship, airplane, trolley, streetcar or spaceship.
  • deboite — a step in which the dancer stands on the toes with legs together and then springs up, swinging one foot out and around to the back of the other.
  • deboned — Having its bones removed.
  • deboner — a person or a device that debones a piece of meat or fish
  • deboost — To slow a spacecraft, typically in order to achieve a stable orbit.
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