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6-letter words containing b, k

  • boykie — a chap or fellow
  • bpmake — Aspirin
  • braker — Shipbuilding. mask (def 19).
  • brakes — any of several large or coarse ferns, especially the bracken, Pteridium aquilinum.
  • branks — (formerly) an iron bridle used to restrain scolding women
  • branky — ostentatious; showy
  • bratsk — city in SC Siberian Russia, on the Angara River: pop. 258,000
  • breeks — trousers
  • bricky — made of bricks, or like a brick
  • broken — Broken is the past participle of break.
  • broker — A broker is a person whose job is to buy and sell shares, foreign money, or goods for other people.
  • broket — (character)   /broh'k*t/ or /broh'ket/ (From broken bracket) Either of the characters "<" or ">" when used as paired enclosing delimiters (angle brackets).
  • brooke — Alan Francis
  • brooks — Geraldine. born 1955, Australian writer. Her novels include March (2005), which won the Pulitzer prize
  • brooky — abounding in brooks.
  • bubkes — nothing
  • bubkis — nothing
  • bucked — cheered up
  • bucker — the male of the deer, antelope, rabbit, hare, sheep, or goat.
  • bucket — A bucket is a round metal or plastic container with a handle attached to its sides. Buckets are often used for holding and carrying water.
  • buckie — a whelk or its shell
  • buckle — A buckle is a piece of metal or plastic attached to one end of a belt or strap, which is used to fasten it.
  • buckra — (used contemptuously by Black people, esp in the US) a White man
  • bugaku — a classical Japanese dance of Chinese origin, originally designed as entertainment for the imperial palace: performed exclusively by men, who serve as both dancers and musicians.
  • bukavu — a port in E Democratic Republic of Congo, on Lake Kivu: commercial and industrial centre. Pop: 294 000 (2005 est)
  • bulker — magnitude in three dimensions: a ship of great bulk.
  • 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.
  • bunkum — If you say that something that has been said or written is bunkum, you mean that you think it is completely untrue or very stupid.
  • burked — to murder, as by suffocation, so as to leave no or few marks of violence.
  • burker — a person who burkes
  • burkha — all-enveloping garment worn by Muslim women
  • busker — Chiefly British. to entertain by dancing, singing, or reciting on the street or in a public place.
  • busket — a bouquet
  • buskin — (formerly) a sandal-like covering for the foot and leg, reaching the calf and usually laced
  • buzuki — bouzouki.
  • bytalk — trivial conversation
  • bywork — work done outside usual working hours
  • chabuk — (in Asia, especially the East) a horsewhip, formerly often used for inflicting corporal punishment.
  • debark — to remove the bark from (a tree)
  • debeak — to remove part of the beak of poultry to reduce the risk of such habits as feather-picking or cannibalism
  • debulk — (transitive, surgery) To remove part of (a malignant tumour).
  • debunk — If you debunk a widely held belief, you show that it is false. If you debunk something that is widely admired, you show that it is not as good as people think it is.
  • dibbuk — dybbuk
  • dubcekAlexander, 1921–92, Czechoslovakian political leader: first secretary of the Communist Party 1968–69.
  • dybbuk — a demon, or the soul of a dead person, that enters the body of a living person and directs the person's conduct, exorcism being possible only by a religious ceremony.
  • e-book — a book in digital form.
  • ebooks — Plural form of ebook.
  • embank — Construct a wall or bank of earth or stone in order to confine (a river) within certain limits.
  • embark — Go on board a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle.
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