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6-letter words containing b, e, l

  • balter — (intransitive) To tumble; dance clumsily.
  • bangle — A bangle is a decorated metal or wooden ring that you can wear round your wrist or ankle.
  • barbel — any of several slender tactile spines or bristles that hang from the jaws of certain fishes, such as the catfish and carp
  • barble — Obsolete form of barbel.
  • barely — You use barely to say that something is only just true or only just the case.
  • barley — Barley is a grain that is used to make food, beer, and whisky.
  • barrel — A barrel is a large, round container for liquids or food.
  • basely — morally low; without estimable personal qualities; dishonorable; meanspirited; selfish; cowardly.
  • bastle — a fortified farmhouse built near to the Scottish–English border, particularly during the 16th and 17th centuries
  • batler — a flat piece of wood once used for beating clothes during washing or to smooth them when dry
  • batley — a town in N England, in Kirklees unitary authority, West Yorkshire. Pop: 49 448 (2001)
  • battel — fertile; nourishing
  • battle — A battle is a violent fight between groups of people, especially one between military forces during a war.
  • bauble — A bauble is a small, cheap ornament or piece of jewellery.
  • bawble — Misspelling of bauble.
  • bawled — Simple past tense and past participle of bawl.
  • bawler — to cry or wail lustily.
  • bawley — a small fishing boat used off the coast of Essex and Kent
  • beable — (physics) Anything that could possibly be.
  • beadle — (formerly, in the Church of England) a minor parish official who acted as an usher and kept order
  • beagle — A beagle is a short-haired black and brown dog with long ears and short legs. It is kept as a pet or sometimes used for hunting.
  • bearly — Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of bears; ursine.
  • becall — to use insulting words about someone
  • becalm — to calm down
  • beclog — to clog (something) up, to block thoroughly
  • becurl — to cover with curls
  • bedeal — (transitive, obsolete) To deprive (of).
  • bedell — Obsolete spelling of beadle.
  • bedlam — Bedlam means a great deal of noise and disorder. People often say 'It was bedlam' to mean 'There was bedlam'.
  • bedlem — Alternative spelling of bedlam.
  • bedral — a minor official in the Scottish Episcopal Church, similar but not identical to the English beadle
  • beetle — A beetle is an insect with a hard covering to its body.
  • befall — If something bad or unlucky befalls you, it happens to you.
  • befell — to happen or occur.
  • beflag — to decorate with flags
  • beflea — to infest with fleas
  • beflum — idle, deceptive, or cajoling speech
  • befool — to make a fool of
  • befoul — to make dirty or foul; soil; defile
  • begall — to make sore by rubbing
  • begild — to decorate or cover with gold
  • beglad — to make glad
  • begulf — to engulf or overwhelm
  • behalf — interest, part, benefit, or respect (only in the phrases on (someone's) behalf, on or US and Canadian in behalf of, in this (or that) behalf)
  • beheld — Beheld is the past tense of behold.
  • behold — If you behold someone or something, you see them.
  • behowl — to howl at
  • belace — to decorate with lace
  • belady — to call (someone) a lady
  • belamy — a close friend
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