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6-letter words containing b, e, u

  • buddle — a sloping trough in which ore is washed
  • budger — a person who budges or stirs
  • budget — Your budget is the amount of money that you have available to spend. The budget for something is the amount of money that a person, organization, or country has available to spend on it.
  • budgie — A budgie is the same as a budgerigar.
  • buffed — Chiefly British Dialect. a blow; slap.
  • buffer — A buffer is something that prevents something else from being harmed or that prevents two things from harming each other.
  • buffet — A buffet is a meal of cold food that is displayed on a long table at a party or public occasion. Guests usually serve themselves from the table.
  • buftie — a homosexual man
  • bugeye — a ketch-rigged sailing vessel used on Chesapeake Bay.
  • bugged — Also called true bug, hemipteran, hemipteron. a hemipterous insect.
  • bugger — Some people use bugger to describe a person who has done something annoying or stupid.
  • bugler — A bugler is someone who plays the bugle.
  • buglet — a small bugle
  • bulbed — having a bulb or bulbs
  • bulged — a rounded projection, bend, or protruding part; protuberance; hump: a bulge in a wall.
  • bulger — a thing which bulges
  • bulker — magnitude in three dimensions: a ship of great bulk.
  • bullae — a seal attached to an official document, as a papal bull.
  • bulled — the male of a bovine animal, especially of the genus Bos, with sexual organs intact and capable of reproduction.
  • buller — to make a bubbling sound
  • bullet — A bullet is a small piece of metal with a pointed or rounded end, which is fired out of a gun.
  • bulwerSir Henry (William Henry Lytton Earle Bulwer; Baron Dalling and Bulwer) 1801–72, British diplomat and author.
  • bumble — to speak or do in a clumsy, muddled, or inefficient way
  • bummed — depressed, upset, distressed, annoyed, etc.
  • bummel — a stroll
  • bummer — If you say that something is a bummer, you mean that it is unpleasant or annoying.
  • bumper — Bumpers are bars at the front and back of a vehicle which protect it if it bumps into something.
  • bunche — Ralph Johnson. 1904–71, US diplomat and United Nations official: awarded the Nobel peace prize in 1950 for his work as UN mediator in Palestine (1948–49); UN undersecretary (1954–71)
  • bundle — A bundle of things is a number of them that are tied together or wrapped in a cloth or bag so that they can be carried or stored.
  • bunged — a stopper for the opening of a cask.
  • bungee — a type of stretchy rope consisting of elastic strands often in a fabric casing
  • bunger — a firework
  • bungle — If you bungle something, you fail to do it properly, because you make mistakes or are clumsy.
  • bunker — A bunker is a place, usually underground, that has been built with strong walls to protect it against heavy gunfire and bombing.
  • bunkie — bunkmate.
  • bunsen — Robert Wilhelm (ˈroːbɛrt ˈvɪlhɛlm). 1811–99, German chemist who with Kirchhoff developed spectrum analysis and discovered the elements caesium and rubidium. He invented the Bunsen burner and the ice calorimeter
  • bunter — a batter who deliberately bunts the ball
  • bunuel — Luis (lwis). 1900–83, Spanish film director. He collaborated with Salvador Dali on the first surrealist films, Un Chien andalou (1929) and L'Age d'or (1930). His later films include Viridiana (1961), Belle de jour (1966), and The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972)
  • buoyed — Nautical. a distinctively shaped and marked float, sometimes carrying a signal or signals, anchored to mark a channel, anchorage, navigational hazard, etc., or to provide a mooring place away from the shore.
  • buppie — an affluent young Black person
  • burble — If something burbles, it makes a low continuous bubbling sound.
  • burden — If you describe a problem or a responsibility as a burden, you mean that it causes someone a lot of difficulty, worry, or hard work.
  • bureau — A bureau is an office, organization, or government department that collects and distributes information.
  • burele — the netlike pattern of colored lines or dots forming the background design of certain postage stamps.
  • burgee — a triangular or swallow-tailed flag flown from the mast of a merchant ship for identification and from the mast of a yacht to indicate its owner's membership of a particular yacht club
  • burger — A burger is a flat round mass of minced meat or vegetables, which is fried and often eaten in a bread roll.
  • burgle — If a building is burgled, a thief enters it by force and steals things.
  • buried — to put in the ground and cover with earth: The pirates buried the chest on the island.
  • 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.
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