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8-letter words containing b, e, r, m

  • birdlime — a sticky substance, prepared from holly, mistletoe, or other plants, smeared on twigs to catch small birds
  • bloomers — Bloomers are an old-fashioned kind of women's underwear which consists of wide, loose trousers gathered at the knees.
  • bloomery — a place in which malleable iron is produced directly from iron ore
  • blumberg — Baruch Samuel.1925–2011, US physician, noted for work on antigens: shared the Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1976
  • bombarde — an alto wind instrument similar to the oboe or medieval shawm, used mainly in Breton traditional music
  • boresome — boring or uninteresting
  • bottomer — a person who makes the seat part of a chair
  • brakeman — a crew member of a goods or passenger train. His duties include controlling auxiliary braking power and inspecting the train
  • bramante — Donato (doˈnato). ?1444–1514, Italian architect and artist of the High Renaissance. He modelled his designs for domed centrally planned churches on classical Roman architecture
  • brambled — any prickly shrub belonging to the genus Rubus, of the rose family.
  • bramwell — a male given name.
  • breaming — to clean (a ship's bottom) by applying burning furze, reeds, etc., to soften the pitch and loosen adherent matter.
  • brideman — a male attendant of the bridegroom at a wedding
  • bromance — A bromance is a close but not sexual relationship between two men.
  • bromberg — German name of Bydgoszcz.
  • bromelia — any plant of the family Bromeliaceae of tropical American plants, characterized by a short stem and deeply cleft calyx
  • bromelin — a protein-digesting enzyme (see endopeptidase) found in pineapple and extracted for use in treating joint pain and inflammation, hay fever, and various other conditions
  • brumaire — the month of mist: the second month of the French revolutionary calendar, extending from Oct 23 to Nov 21
  • brummell — George Bryan, called Beau Brummell. 1778–1840, English dandy: leader of fashion in the Regency period
  • brunizem — a type of dark prairie soil
  • bumblers — to bungle or blunder awkwardly; muddle: He somehow bumbled through two years of college.
  • bummaree — a dealer at Billingsgate fish market
  • bumsters — trousers cut so that the top lies just above the cleft of the buttocks
  • byre-man — a man who raises or tends cows.
  • cambered — Having camber.
  • cerebrum — the anterior portion of the brain of vertebrates, consisting of two lateral hemispheres joined by a thick band of fibres: the dominant part of the brain in man, associated with intellectual function, emotion, and personality
  • chambers — a judge's room for hearing cases not taken in open court
  • chambery — a city in SE France, in the Alps: skiing centre; former capital of the duchy of Savoy. Pop: 59 188 (2006)
  • cherubim — a celestial being. Gen. 3:24; Ezek. 1, 10.
  • clambers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of clamber.
  • climbers — Plural form of climber.
  • combater — One who combats.
  • combiner — Any of various electronic devices that combine signals, in particular.
  • combover — Hair that is combed over a bald spot in an attempt to cover it.
  • crabmeat — Crabmeat is the part of a crab that you eat.
  • crumbled — Simple past tense and past participle of crumble.
  • crumbles — Plural form of crumble.
  • cucumber — A cucumber is a long thin vegetable with a hard green skin and wet transparent flesh. It is eaten raw in salads.
  • cumbered — Simple past tense and past participle of cumber.
  • cumberer — Someone or something that cumbers.
  • december — December is the twelfth and last month of the year in the Western calendar.
  • delubrum — a shrine or sanctuary
  • doberman — Doberman pinscher.
  • drambuie — a liqueur based on Scotch whisky and made exclusively in Scotland from a recipe dating from the 18th century
  • drumbeat — the rhythmic sound of a drum.
  • e number — E numbers are artificial substances which are added to some foods and drinks to improve their flavour or colour or to make them last longer. They are called E numbers because they are represented in Europe by code names which begin with the letter 'E'.
  • eboracum — ancient name of York, England.
  • embalmer — One who embalms a corpse; a practicioner of mortuary science.
  • embanker — a person who makes an embankment
  • embarass — Misspelling of embarrass.
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