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

  • bronzen — made of or resembling bronze
  • bronzer — a cosmetic applied to the skin to simulate a sun tan
  • browner — a dark tertiary color with a yellowish or reddish hue.
  • brownie — Brownies are small flat biscuits or cakes. They are usually chocolate flavoured and have nuts in them.
  • brucine — bitter poisonous alkaloid resembling strychnine and obtained from the tree Strychnos nuxvomica: used mainly in the denaturation of alcohol. Formula: C23H26N2O4
  • brunner — Emil [ey-meel] /ˈeɪ mil/ (Show IPA), 1889–1966, Swiss Protestant theologian.
  • brussen — bold
  • buchner — Eduard (ˈeːduart). 1860–1917, German chemist who demonstrated that alcoholic fermentation is due to enzymes in the yeast: Nobel prize for chemistry 1907
  • buckner — Simon Bolivar [bol-uh-ver] /ˈbɒl ə vər/ (Show IPA), 1823–1914, U.S. Confederate general and politician.
  • bungler — A bungler is a person who often fails to do things properly because they make mistakes or are clumsy.
  • burgeon — If something burgeons, it grows or develops rapidly.
  • burnett — Frances Hodgson (ˈhɒdʒsən). 1849–1924, US novelist, born in England; author of Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886) and The Secret Garden (1911)
  • burnley — an industrial town in NW England, in E Lancashire. Pop: 73 021 (2001)
  • burthen — burden1
  • byliner — a person who writes articles with bylines
  • byreman — a man who works in a byre
  • byrnies — a coat of mail; hauberk.
  • bywoner — a poor tenant farmer
  • carbeen — an Australian eucalyptus tree, E. tessellaris, having drooping branches and grey bark
  • carbene — a neutral divalent free radical, such as methylene: CH2
  • carbine — A carbine is a light automatic rifle.
  • carbone — Obsolete form of carbon.
  • cernlib — (library)   The CERN Program Library.
  • cirebon — a port in S central Indonesia, on N Java on the Java Sea: scene of the signing of the Tjirebon Agreement of Indonesian independence (1946) by the Netherlands. Pop: 272 263 (2000)
  • crubeen — a pig's trotter, esp one that has been cooked
  • deboner — a person or a device that debones a piece of meat or fish
  • derbent — a port in S Russia, in the Dagestan Republic on the Caspian Sea: founded by the Persians in the 6th century. Pop: 106 000 (2005 est)
  • earbone — (anatomy) Any bone in the ear.
  • embrown — (transitive) To make brown or dusky.
  • enabler — One who helps something to happen.
  • enrobed — Simple past tense and past participle of enrobe.
  • enrober — A machine used to coat food, especially confectionery with chocolate.
  • exurban — Of, pertaining to, or residing in an exurb.
  • funebre — funereal or mournful
  • grabens — Plural form of graben.
  • hepburnAudrey, 1929–93, U.S. actress, born in Belgium.
  • iberian — of or relating to Iberia in SW Europe, its inhabitants, or their language.
  • inbreak — a breaking in; invasion
  • inbreds — Plural form of inbred.
  • inbreed — to breed (individuals of a closely related group) repeatedly.
  • kerbing — the material forming a curb, as along a street.
  • knobber — a two-year-old male deer
  • mirbane — nitrobenzene, as formerly used in perfumes
  • nebular — Astronomy. Also called diffuse nebula. a cloud of interstellar gas and dust. Compare dark nebula, emission nebula, reflection nebula. (formerly) any celestial object that appears nebulous, hazy, or fuzzy, and extended in a telescope view.
  • neibour — Obsolete form of neighbour.
  • netburp — (networking, chat)   (Or "netsplit") When netlag gets really bad, and delays between IRC servers exceed a certain threshhold, the network effectively becomes partitioned for a period of time, and large numbers of people seem to be signing off at the same time and then signing back on again when things get better. An instance of this is called a "netburp" (or, sometimes, netsplit).
  • newberg — a town in NW Oregon.
  • newberyJohn, 1713–67, English publisher.
  • newborn — recently or only just born.
  • newburg — (of seafood) cooked with a cream sauce containing sherry: lobster Newburg.
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