6-letter words containing b, e, r
- burier — a person or thing that buries
- buries — to put in the ground and cover with earth: The pirates buried the chest on the island.
- burked — to murder, as by suffocation, so as to leave no or few marks of violence.
- burker — a person who burkes
- burled — having burls that produce a distorted grain: burled lumber.
- burley — a light thin-leaved tobacco, grown esp in Kentucky
- burned — having been cheated in a sale of drugs
- burner — A burner is a device which produces heat or a flame, especially as part of a cooker, stove, or heater.
- burnet — a plant of the rosaceous genus Sanguisorba (or Poterium), such as S. minor (or P. sanguisorba) (salad burnet), which has purple-tinged green flowers and leaves that are sometimes used for salads
- burney — Charles. 1726–1814, English composer and music historian, whose books include A General History of Music (1776–89)
- burnie — a sideburn
- burpee — a squat thrust that starts and ends in a standing position
- burred — prickly or rough in texture.
- burrer — a person who removes burrs
- bursae — Anatomy, Zoology. a pouch, sac, or vesicle, especially a sac containing synovia, to facilitate motion, as between a tendon and a bone.
- busera — a Ugandan alcoholic drink made from millet: sometimes mixed with honey
- busher — a low plant with many branches that arise from or near the ground.
- busier — actively and attentively engaged in work or a pastime: busy with her work.
- busker — Chiefly British. to entertain by dancing, singing, or reciting on the street or in a public place.
- busser — A busser is someone whose job is to set or clear tables in a restaurant.
- buster — a person or thing destroying something as specified
- butler — A butler is the most important male servant in a wealthy house.
- butter — Butter is a soft yellow substance made from cream. You spread it on bread or use it in cooking.
- buzzer — A buzzer is an electrical device that is used to make a buzzing sound for example, to attract someone's attention.
- by ear — without reading from written music
- byrnes — James Francis, 1879–1972, U.S. statesman and jurist: secretary of state 1945–47.
- byrnie — a coat of mail; hauberk.
- cabers — Plural form of caber.
- cabler — a cable broadcasting company
- cabrie — a ruminant mammal, Antilocapra americana, that inhabits rocky deserts of North America and has small branched horns
- camber — A camber is a gradual downward slope from the centre of a road to each side of it.
- cambre — Obsolete form of camber.
- caribe — a piranha
- cembra — a large Swiss pine which yields nuts (cembra nuts)
- cherub — A cherub is a kind of angel that is represented in art as a naked child with wings.
- cibber — Colley (ˈkɒlɪ). 1671–1757, English actor and dramatist; poet laureate (1730–57)
- cobber — a friend; mate: used as a term of address to males
- comber — a person, tool, or machine that combs wool, flax, etc
- corbel — a bracket, usually of stone or brick
- corbie — a crow or raven
- coverb — (grammar) Any of a class of words in various languages including Chinese and Hungarian whose function is analogous to the cases, prepositions and postpositions of other languages.
- crabbe — George. 1754–1832, English narrative poet, noted for his depiction of impoverished rural life in The Village (1783) and The Borough (1810)
- crambe — any plant of the Crambe genus of the Brassicaceae family native to Europe, eastern Africa, and central and southern Asia
- crible — dotted
- cumber — to obstruct or hinder
- cumbre — Archaic form of cumber.
- curbed — Also, British, kerb. a rim, especially of joined stones or concrete, along a street or roadway, forming an edge for a sidewalk.
- curber — a person or thing that curbs or restrains something
- cyber- — indicating computers
- cybers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cyber.