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7-letter words containing b, e, g, r

  • bragger — a person who brags.
  • brangle — a squabble, dispute, or wrangle
  • breenge — to lunge forward; move violently or dash
  • bregenz — a resort in W Austria, the capital of Vorarlberg province. Pop: 26 752 (2001)
  • brewage — a product of brewing; brew
  • brewing — a quantity of a beverage brewed at one time
  • bridgerJames, 1804–81, U.S. fur trader and mountain man, noted for his tall tales.
  • bridges — Robert (Seymour). 1844–1930, English poet: poet laureate (1913–30)
  • bridget — 453–523 ad, Irish abbess; a patron saint of Ireland. Feast day: Feb 1
  • brigade — A brigade is one of the groups which an army is divided into.
  • bringer — A bringer of something is someone who brings or provides it.
  • broglie — Achille Charles Léonce Victor Duc de Broglie1785-1870; Fr. statesman under Napoleon I & Louis Philippe
  • brokage — brokerage.
  • bruegel — Jan (jɑn ) ; yän) 1568-1625; Fl. painter: son of Pieter
  • bugbear — Something or someone that is your bugbear worries or upsets you.
  • buggery — Buggery is anal intercourse.
  • bungler — A bungler is a person who often fails to do things properly because they make mistakes or are clumsy.
  • burbage — James. ?1530–97, English actor and theatre manager, who built (1576) the first theatre in England
  • burgage — (in England) tenure of land or tenement in a town or city, which originally involved a fixed money rent
  • burgeon — If something burgeons, it grows or develops rapidly.
  • burgess — a citizen or freeman of a borough
  • burgher — The burghers of a town or city are the people who live there, especially the richer or more respectable people.
  • carbage — snack food that is of limited nutritional value but low in carbohydrates
  • embargo — Impose an official ban on (trade or a country or commodity).
  • esbjerg — a port in SW Denmark, in Jutland on the North Sea: Denmark's chief fishing port. Pop: 72 550 (2004 est)
  • faberge — (Peter) Carl Gustavovich [kahrl guh-stah-vuh-vich] /kɑrl gəˈstɑ və vɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1846–1920, Russian goldsmith and jeweler.
  • fibiger — Johannes Andreas Grib [yoh-hah-nis ahn-dre-ahs greeb] /yoʊˈhɑ nɪs ɑnˈdrɛ ɑs grib/ (Show IPA), 1867–1928, Danish pathologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1926.
  • firebug — arsonist; incendiary; pyromaniac.
  • gabbier — Comparative form of gabby.
  • gabbler — One who gabbles, or prates loquaciously on a trifling subject.
  • gabriel — one of the archangels, appearing usually as a divine messenger. Dan. 8:16, 9:21; Luke 1:19, 26.
  • gambier — an astringent extract obtained from the leaves and young shoots of a tropical Asian shrub, Uncaria gambir, of the madder family, used in medicine, dyeing, tanning, etc.
  • gambler — to play at any game of chance for money or other stakes.
  • gambrel — the hock of an animal, especially of a horse.
  • garbage — discarded animal and vegetable matter, as from a kitchen; refuse.
  • garbled — to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: to garble instructions.
  • garbler — One who garbles.
  • garbles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of garble.
  • garbure — a thick soup usually made with bacon, cabbage, and other vegetables, originally from Bearn in SW France
  • gearbox — a transmission, as in an automobile.
  • gerbera — any of various composite plants of the genus Gerbera, native to Africa and Asia, having showy, many-rayed flowers ranging from yellow to red.
  • gerbils — Plural form of gerbil.
  • gibberd — Sir Frederick. 1908–84, British architect and town planner. His buildings include the Liverpool Roman Catholic cathedral (1960–67) and the Regent's Park Mosque in London (1977). Harlow in the UK and Santa Teresa in Venezuela were built to his plans
  • gibbers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gibber.
  • gilbertCass, 1859–1934, U.S. architect.
  • glibber — Comparative form of glib.
  • gobbler — a person or thing that gobbles or consumes voraciously or quickly: a gobbler of science fiction.
  • gombergMoses, 1866–1947, U.S. chemist, born in Russia.
  • goobers — Plural form of goober.
  • grabbed — to seize suddenly or quickly; snatch; clutch: He grabbed me by the collar.
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