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7-letter words containing b, l, e, o

  • bunuelo — a thin, round, fried pastry, often dusted with cinnamon sugar.
  • byelovo — a city in W central Russia. Pop: 65 000 (2005 est)
  • cembalo — harpsichord
  • chaebol — a large, usually family-owned, business group in South Korea
  • clobber — You can refer to someone's possessions, especially their clothes, as their clobber.
  • closeby — nearby; adjacent; neighboring.
  • cobbled — A cobbled street has a surface made of cobblestones.
  • cobbler — A cobbler is a person whose job is to make or mend shoes.
  • cobbles — coal in small rounded lumps
  • coblenz — Koblenz
  • codable — capable of being coded
  • colbert — Claudette, real name Claudette Lily Chauchoin. 1905–96, French-born Hollywood actress, noted for her sophisticated comedy roles; her films include It Happened One Night (1934) and The Palm Beach Story (1942)
  • corbeil — a carved ornament in the form of a basket of fruit, flowers, etc
  • corbels — Plural form of corbel.
  • cowbell — A cowbell is a small bell that is hung around a cow's neck so that the ringing sound makes it possible to find the cow.
  • deblock — (computing) To separate the logical records that have been combined into a physical block for storage.
  • docible — Easily taught or managed; teachable.
  • donable — available free from government surpluses: Needy people in the program were eligible for donable foods such as beans and peas.
  • doubled — twice as large, heavy, strong, etc.; twofold in size, amount, number, extent, etc.: a double portion; a new house double the size of the old one.
  • doubler — One who doubles.
  • doubles — twice as large, heavy, strong, etc.; twofold in size, amount, number, extent, etc.: a double portion; a new house double the size of the old one.
  • doublet — a close-fitting outer garment, with or without sleeves and sometimes having a short skirt, worn by men in the Renaissance.
  • dowable — subject to the provision of a dower: dowable land.
  • earlobe — the soft, pendulous lower part of the external ear.
  • ecbolic — Medicine/Medical. promoting labor by increasing uterine contractions.
  • elbowed — Simple past tense and past participle of elbow.
  • embloom — to adorn with blooms
  • embolic — (pathology) Of or relating to an embolus or an embolism.
  • embolon — A blood clot or swelling, particularly one that blocks an artery.
  • embolus — A blood clot, air bubble, piece of fatty deposit, or other object that has been carried in the bloodstream to lodge in a vessel and cause an embolism.
  • embowel — (obsolete) To enclose or bury.
  • embroil — Involve (someone) deeply in an argument, conflict, or difficult situation.
  • en bloc — If a group of people do something en bloc, they do it all together and at the same time. If a group of people or things are considered en bloc, they are considered as a group, rather than separately.
  • englobe — Enclose in or shape into a globe.
  • ennoble — Give (someone) a noble rank or title.
  • epiboly — a process that occurs during gastrulation in vertebrates, in which cells on one side of the blastula grow over and surround the remaining cells and yolk and eventually form the ectoderm
  • eyebolt — A bolt or bar with an eye at the end for attaching a hook or ring to.
  • flobber — To sag and collapse like a deflating balloon.
  • foibles — A minor weakness or eccentricity in someone's character.
  • froebel — Friedrich [free-drikh] /ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1782–1852, German educational reformer: founder of the kindergarten system.
  • glebous — clod-like; earthy
  • globate — shaped like a globe.
  • globose — having the shape of a globe; globelike.
  • globule — a small spherical body.
  • gobbled — Simple past tense and past participle of gobble.
  • gobbler — a person or thing that gobbles or consumes voraciously or quickly: a gobbler of science fiction.
  • gobbles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gobble.
  • gobelin — made at the tapestry factory established in Paris in the 15th century by the Gobelins, a French family of dyers and weavers.
  • goblets — Plural form of goblet.
  • hellbox — hell (def 9).
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