7-letter words containing b, e, n, l
- bleaunt — a short tunic or blouse, worn in the Middle Ages.
- blended — made by commercially blending different varieties of the same thing
- blender — A blender is an electrical kitchen appliance used for mixing liquids and soft foods together or turning fruit or vegetables into liquid.
- blinded — unable to see; lacking the sense of sight; sightless: a blind man.
- blinder — If you say that someone such as a sports player or musician has played a blinder, you are emphasizing that they have played something very well.
- blinger — expensive and flashy jewelry, clothing, or other possessions.
- blinked — to open and close the eye, especially involuntarily; wink rapidly and repeatedly.
- blinker — a flashing light for sending messages, as a warning device, etc, such as a direction indicator on a road vehicle
- blintze — a thin pancake folded or rolled around a filling, as of cheese or fruit, and fried or baked.
- blondel — François [frahn-swa] /frɑ̃ˈswa/ (Show IPA), (Sieur des Croisettes) 1618–86, French architect.
- blonder — (of a woman or girl) having fair hair and usually fair skin and light eyes.
- blondie — Informal. a blond person: All the children were blondies.
- blueing — a blue material, such as indigo, used in laundering to counteract yellowing
- blunden — Edmund (Charles). 1896–1974, British poet and scholar, noted esp for Undertones of War (1928), a memoir of World War I in verse and prose
- blunder — A blunder is a stupid or careless mistake.
- blunger — a large vat in which the contents, esp clay and water, are mixed by rotating arms
- blunker — a person who prints cloths
- blunted — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
- blunter — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
- boloney — baloney
- bonsela — a present or gratuity
- boolean — of or relating to Boole or his symbolic logic
- borneol — a white solid terpene alcohol extracted from the Malaysian tree Dryobalanops aromatica, used in perfume and in the manufacture of organic esters. Formula: C10H17OH
- bowline — a line for controlling the weather leech of a square sail when a vessel is close-hauled
- brangle — a squabble, dispute, or wrangle
- brantle — a French dance
- brendel — Alfred. born 1931, Austrian pianist and poet
- brindle — a brindled animal
- bullpen — In baseball, a bullpen is an area alongside the playing field, where pitchers can practice or warm up.
- bundled — (of hardware or software) sold together, as a package, rather than separately.
- bungled — to do clumsily and awkwardly; botch: He bungled the job.
- bungler — A bungler is a person who often fails to do things properly because they make mistakes or are clumsy.
- bunuelo — a thin, round, fried pastry, often dusted with cinnamon sugar.
- burnley — an industrial town in NW England, in E Lancashire. Pop: 73 021 (2001)
- by-line — a line under the title of a newspaper or magazine article giving the author's name
- byliner — a person who writes articles with bylines
- cernlib — (library) The CERN Program Library.
- clubmen — Plural form of clubman.
- coblenz — Koblenz
- donable — available free from government surpluses: Needy people in the program were eligible for donable foods such as beans and peas.
- embolon — A blood clot or swelling, particularly one that blocks an artery.
- en bloc — If a group of people do something en bloc, they do it all together and at the same time. If a group of people or things are considered en bloc, they are considered as a group, rather than separately.
- enabled — Give (someone or something) the authority or means to do something.
- enabler — One who helps something to happen.
- enables — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enable.
- englobe — Enclose in or shape into a globe.
- ennoble — Give (someone) a noble rank or title.
- finable — subject to a fine; punishable by a fine.
- flybane — A kind of catchfly of the genus Silene.
- gobelin — made at the tapestry factory established in Paris in the 15th century by the Gobelins, a French family of dyers and weavers.