7-letter words containing b, e, t, h
- brother — Your brother is a boy or a man who has the same parents as you.
- burthen — burden1
- butcher — A butcher is a shopkeeper who cuts up and sells meat. Some butchers also kill animals for meat and make foods such as sausages and meat pies.
- embathe — (archaic) To bathe.
- enhabit — Obsolete form of inhabit.
- exhibit — Publicly display (a work of art or item of interest) in an art gallery or museum or at a trade fair.
- eyebath — A cup-shaped vessel used to apply eyewash.
- habited — inhabited.
- habitue — a frequent or habitual visitor to a place: a habitué of art galleries.
- habutae — a thin, soft, durable Japanese silk, used in the manufacture of garments.
- halbert — (weapons) An ancient long-handled weapon, of which the head had a point and several long, sharp edges, curved or straight, and sometimes additional points. The heads were sometimes of very elaborate form.
- hatable — meriting hatred or loathing.
- hebetic — pertaining to or occurring in puberty.
- henbits — Plural form of henbit.
- herbart — Johann Friedrich [yoh-hahn free-drikh] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1776–1841, German philosopher and educator.
- herbert — Frank, 1920–86, U.S. science-fiction writer.
- herblet — a little herb
- hilbert — David [dey-vid;; German dah-vit] /ˈdeɪ vɪd;; German ˈdɑ vɪt/ (Show IPA), 1862–1943, German mathematician.
- hot bed — an area having rails or rolls on which rolled pieces are laid to cool.
- hotbeds — Plural form of hotbed.
- howbeit — Archaic. nevertheless.
- icebath — Alternative spelling of ice bath.
- ketubah — the formal contract in a Jewish religious marriage that includes specific financial protection for the wife in the event that the husband dies or divorces her.
- lambeth — a borough of Greater London, England.
- lizbeth — a female given name, form of Elizabeth.
- macbeth — died 1057, king of Scotland 1040–57.
- nekhbet — the guardian goddess of Upper Egypt, often represented as a vulture.
- obrecht — Jacob [yah-kawp] /ˈyɑ kɔp/ (Show IPA), 1430–1505, Dutch composer and conductor.
- phablet — a mobile device that combines the features of a smartphone and a tablet computer and is larger than a typical smartphone but not as large as a typical small tablet.
- potherb — any herb prepared as food by cooking in a pot, as spinach, or added as seasoning in cookery, as thyme.
- rebirth — a new or second birth: the rebirth of the soul.
- sherbet — a frozen fruit-flavored mixture, similar to an ice, but with milk, egg white, or gelatin added.
- shubert — Lee (Levi Shubert) 1875–1953, and his brothers Sam S. 1876–1905, and Jacob J. 1880–1963, U.S. theatrical managers.
- the ba' — a game somewhat like rugby played in Orkney at Christmas and New Year between two very large teams of players
- the bad — those who are wicked
- the box — television
- the boy — the right tool for a particular task
- the hub — Boston, Mass.
- the rub — an obstacle or difficulty (esp in the phrase there's the rub)
- the web — (as modifier)
- thebaic — an ancient city in Upper Egypt, on the Nile, whose ruins are located in the modern towns of Karnak and Luxor: a former capital of Egypt.
- thebaid — the ancient region surrounding Thebes, in Egypt.
- theorbo — an obsolete bass lute with two sets of strings attached to separate peg boxes, one above the other, on the neck.
- thereby — by that; by means of that.
- thimble — a small cap, usually of metal, worn over the fingertip to protect it when pushing a needle through cloth in sewing.
- thumbed — the short, thick, inner digit of the human hand, next to the forefinger.
- thumber — a hitchhiker.
- thurber — James (Grover) [groh-ver] /ˈgroʊ vər/ (Show IPA), 1894–1961, U.S. writer, caricaturist, and illustrator.
- tshombe — Moise Kapenda [moh-ees kuh-pen-duh] /moʊˈis kəˈpɛn də/ (Show IPA), 1919–69, African political leader in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: prime minister 1964–65.
- unberth — Nautical. to allot to (a vessel) a certain space at which to anchor or tie up. to bring to or install in a berth, anchorage, or moorage: The captain had to berth the ship without the aid of tugboats.