7-letter words containing b, e, o, s
- boneset — any of various North American plants of the genus Eupatorium, esp E. perfoliatum, which has flat clusters of small white flowers: family Asteraceae (composites)
- bonkers — If you say that someone is bonkers, you mean that they are silly or act in a crazy way.
- bonsela — a present or gratuity
- boobies — a stupid person; dunce.
- boonies — The boonies are the same as the boondocks.
- booster — A booster is something that increases a positive or desirable quality.
- borders — administrative division of S Scotland, on the English border: 1,800 sq mi (4,662 sq km); pop. 101,000
- boscage — a mass of trees and shrubs; thicket
- boskage — a mass of trees or shrubs; wood, grove, or thicket.
- bosomed — having a (specified kind of) bosom
- bosquet — bosket
- bossage — stonework blocked out for later carving.
- bossest — a person who employs or superintends workers; manager.
- bossier — studded with bosses.
- bossuet — Jacques Bénigne (ʒɑk beniɲ). 1627–1704, French bishop: noted for his funeral orations
- boswell — James. 1740–95, Scottish author and lawyer, noted particularly for his Life of Samuel Johnson (1791)
- bourges — a city in central France. Pop: 72 480 (1999)
- bowlegs — outward curvature of the legs causing a separation of the knees when the ankles are close or in contact.
- bowless — without a bow or bows
- box set — a collection of items of the same type, packaged together for sale in a presentation box
- boxties — Irish potato cakes
- brasero — a large metal tray for holding burning coals
- bresson — Robert (rɔbɛr). 1901–99, French film director: his films include Le Journal d'un curé de campagne (1950), Une Femme douce (1969), and L'Argent (1983)
- broches — (in weaving tapestries) a device on which the filling yarn is wound, used as a shuttle in passing through the shed of the loom to deposit the yarn.
- brokest — a simple past tense of break.
- browser — A browser is someone who browses in a shop.
- bygones — past; gone by; earlier; former: The faded photograph brought memories of bygone days.
- caboose — On a freight train, a caboose is a small car, usually at the rear, in which the crew travels.
- casebox — a device, similar to an abacus, for recording the cards as they are drawn from the dealing box.
- closeby — nearby; adjacent; neighboring.
- cobbers — Plural form of cobber.
- cobbles — coal in small rounded lumps
- cobwebs — mustiness, confusion, or obscurity
- combers — Plural form of comber.
- coombes — Plural form of coombe.
- corbels — Plural form of corbel.
- deboost — To slow a spacecraft, typically in order to achieve a stable orbit.
- debtors — Plural form of debtor.
- disobey — Fail to obey (rules, a command, or someone in authority).
- disrobe — Take off one's clothes.
- dobbers — Plural form of dobber.
- dobbies — Plural form of dobby.
- doubles — twice as large, heavy, strong, etc.; twofold in size, amount, number, extent, etc.: a double portion; a new house double the size of the old one.
- earbobs — an earring or eardrop.
- ebonics — Black English.
- ebonies — Plural form of ebony.
- ebonise — Alternative form of ebonize.
- ebonist — a worker in ebony.
- ebriose — inebriated
- embolus — A blood clot, air bubble, piece of fatty deposit, or other object that has been carried in the bloodstream to lodge in a vessel and cause an embolism.