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11-letter words containing b, i, r, o, d

  • hard-boiled — Cookery. (of an egg) boiled in the shell long enough for the yolk and white to solidify.
  • homebuilder — a person whose occupation is homebuilding.
  • hornblendic — Of or pertaining to hornblende.
  • hybrid corn — a crossbred corn, especially the grain of corn developed by hybridization of repeatedly self-pollinated, and therefore genetically pure, varieties.
  • hybrid rock — an igneous rock formed by molten magma incorporating pre-existing rock through which it passes
  • hydrobromic — of or derived from hydrobromic acid.
  • hydrophobia — rabies.
  • hydrophobic — of or relating to hydrophobia.
  • hyperboloid — a quadric surface having a finite center and some of its plane sections hyperbolas. Equation: x 2 / a 2 + y 2 / b 2 − z 2 / c 2 = 1.
  • idiot board — a mechanical apparatus, as a projector or a continuous roll of paper, for prompting a performer during a program.
  • incrossbred — of or relating to the progeny that result from crossing inbred lines or varieties.
  • keyboarding — the row or set of keys on a piano, organ, or the like.
  • keyboardist — the row or set of keys on a piano, organ, or the like.
  • kid brother — younger male sibling
  • kiteboarder — A person who participates in kiteboarding.
  • kodiak bear — a large, brown bear, Ursus (arctos) middendorffi, inhabiting coastal areas of Alaska and British Columbia, that grows to a length of 9 feet (2.7 meters).
  • labradorite — a feldspar mineral of the plagioclase group, often characterized by a brilliant change of colors, with blue and green most common.
  • langobardic — Lombard1 (def 4).
  • locust bird — any of various pratincoles, esp Glareola nordmanni (black-winged pratincole), that feed on locusts
  • māori bread — bread made with fermented potato yeast
  • meadow bird — the bobolink.
  • microbicide — a substance or preparation for killing microbes.
  • microbrewed — Produced by microbrewing.
  • middle-born — neither first nor last in order of birth, especially second in a family of three children.
  • middlebrows — Plural form of middlebrow.
  • mind-blower — a hallucinogenic drug.
  • mockingbird — any of several gray, black, and white songbirds of the genus Mimus, especially M. polyglottos, of the U.S. and Mexico, noted for their ability to mimic the songs of other birds.
  • monohybrids — Plural form of monohybrid.
  • montbéliard — an industrial town in E France: former capital of the duchy of Burgundy. Pop: 27 570 (1999)
  • morbidities — a morbid state or quality.
  • moribundity — in a dying state; near death.
  • mutton bird — any of several long-winged seabirds, often used as food, especially Puffinus tenuirostris (short-tailed shearwater) of Australia and Puffinus griseus (sooty shearwater) which breeds in the Southern Hemisphere and winters in the Northern Hemisphere.
  • muttonbirds — Plural form of muttonbird.
  • nonbreeding — Not breeding.
  • noncredible — capable of being believed; believable: a credible statement.
  • northbridge — a town in S Massachusetts.
  • noticeboard — Alternative spelling of notice board.
  • obdormition — The sensation of numbness that occurs in a limb when it \"falls asleep\" due to pressure on a nerve.
  • obliterated — to remove or destroy all traces of; do away with; destroy completely.
  • old british — Brythonic as used before a.d. 800.
  • ouija board — board used by spiritualists
  • outbreeding — to breed selected individuals outside the limits of the breed or variety.
  • overbidding — Present participle of overbid.
  • overbridges — Plural form of overbridge.
  • overdubbing — Present participle of overdub.
  • parson bird — tui.
  • preboarding — to put or allow to go aboard in advance of the usual time or before others: Passengers with disabilities will be preboarded.
  • premorbidly — pertaining to diseased parts: morbid anatomy.
  • productible — to bring into existence; give rise to; cause: to produce steam.
  • rabbit food — raw vegetables, especially those used in salads, as lettuce, carrots, radishes, or celery.
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