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12-letter words containing b, e, r, y, l

  • gollywobbler — a very large quadrilateral staysail set between the foremast and mainmast of a schooner.
  • gradeability — a measure of a truck's pulling power expressed as the steepest grade the truck can climb with a full load.
  • grey warbler — a small bush bird that hatches the eggs of the shining cuckoo
  • grizzly bear — a large North American brown bear, Ursus (arctos) horribilis, with coarse, gray-tipped brown fur, once widespread in the western part of the continent as far south as northern Mexico but now restricted to some regions of Alaska, western Canada, and the U.S. Rocky Mountains: a threatened species except in Alaska.
  • hare wallaby — a wallaby of the genus Lagorchestes
  • herbicidally — from a herbicidal point of view
  • heritability — capable of being inherited; inheritable; hereditary.
  • heteroblasty — the morphological changes that occur in plants between juvenility and adulthood
  • hexacarbonyl — (inorganic chemistry) Any compound having six carbonyl groups.
  • hydrolysable — Alternative spelling of hydrolyzable.
  • hydrolyzable — Able to be hydrolyzed.
  • hyperbolical — having the nature of hyperbole; exaggerated.
  • hyperbolised — to use hyperbole; exaggerate.
  • hyperbolized — Simple past tense and past participle of hyperbolize.
  • hyperboloids — Plural form of hyperboloid.
  • hypermutable — Of or in a state in which mutation is abnormally frequent.
  • illiberality — narrowminded; bigoted.
  • immeasurably — incapable of being measured; limitless: the immeasurable vastness of the universe.
  • impenetrably — not penetrable; that cannot be penetrated, pierced, entered, etc.
  • imperishably — In an imperishable manner.
  • ineradicably — not eradicable; not capable of being eradicated, rooted out, or completely removed.
  • inerrability — Freedom or exemption from error; infallibility.
  • inextricably — from which one cannot extricate oneself: an inextricable maze.
  • insufferably — not to be endured; intolerable; unbearable: their insufferable insolence.
  • interlibrary — a place set apart to contain books, periodicals, and other material for reading, viewing, listening, study, or reference, as a room, set of rooms, or building where books may be read or borrowed.
  • interminably — incapable of being terminated; unending: an interminable job.
  • invulnerably — In an invulnerable manner.
  • irredeemably — not redeemable; incapable of being bought back or paid off.
  • irreformably — in an irreformable manner
  • irrefragably — In an irrefragable state or condition.
  • irremediably — not admitting of remedy, cure, or repair: irremediable conduct.
  • irremissibly — In an irremissible manner; unpardonably.
  • irreprovably — in an irreprovable manner
  • irresistably — Misspelling of irresistibly.
  • irresistibly — not resistible; incapable of being resisted or withstood: an irresistible impulse.
  • irresolvably — In an irresolvable manner.
  • irreversibly — not reversible; incapable of being changed: His refusal is irreversible.
  • jubilee year — jubilee (def 5a).
  • labyrinthine — of, relating to, or resembling a labyrinth.
  • landlubberly — Like a landlubber.
  • lay sth bare — If you lay bare something or someone, you reveal or expose them.
  • lay store by — to value or reckon as important
  • learnability — (uncountable) the condition of being learnable.
  • liberatingly — In a liberating manner.
  • liberty bell — the bell of Independence Hall in Philadelphia, rung on July 8, 1776, to announce the adoption of the Declaration of Independence; since then a national symbol of liberty: moved to a special exhibition pavilion behind Independence Hall on January 1, 1976.
  • liberty bond — a single Liberty loan bond.
  • liberty hall — a place or condition of complete liberty
  • liberty loan — any of the five bond issues of the U.S. government floated in World War I.
  • liberty pole — Also called liberty tree. American History. a pole or tree, often with a liberty cap or a banner at the top, usually located on a village green or in a market square, used by the Sons of Liberty in many colonial towns as a symbol of protest against British rule and around which anti-British rallies were held.
  • liberty ship — a slow cargo ship built in large numbers for the U.S. merchant marine during World War II and having a capacity of about 11,000 deadweight tons.
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