10-letter words containing b, l, o, m
- bloomfield — Leonard. 1887–1949, US linguist, influential for his strictly scientific and descriptive approach to comparative linguistics; author of Language (1933)
- bloomsburg — a city in E central Pennsylvania.
- bloomsbury — a district of central London in the borough of Camden: contains the British Museum, part of the University of London, and many publishers' offices
- blue mould — any fungus of the genus Penicillium that forms a bluish mass on decaying food, leather, etc
- bog myrtle — sweet gale.
- böhm flute — a type of flute in which the holes are covered with keys; the standard type of modern flute
- bohmerwald — German name of Bohemian Forest.
- bolshevism — Bolshevism is the political system and ideas that Lenin and his supporters introduced in Russia after the Russian Revolution of 1917.
- bomb blast — the impact caused by a bomb
- bomb lance — a harpoon fitted with an explosive head.
- bookmobile — a vehicle providing lending library facilities
- bottle imp — Cartesian diver.
- bottomhole — The bottomhole is the lowest or deepest part of a well.
- bottomland — a lowland alluvial area near a river
- bottomless — If you describe a supply of something as bottomless, you mean that it seems so large that it will never run out.
- boulangism — the doctrines of militarism and reprisals against Germany, advocated, especially in the 1880s, by the French general Boulanger.
- bowdlerism — to expurgate (a written work) by removing or modifying passages considered vulgar or objectionable.
- box column — a hollow wooden column, as for a porch, usually having a rectangular cross section.
- brahmaloka — the highest part of Kamaloka, where refined souls exist in blissful contemplation of Brahma.
- bread mold — any of an order (Mucorales, esp. Rhizopus nigricans) of fungi often found on decaying vegetable matter or bread
- broomfield — a city in N central Colorado.
- bull moose — a member of the Progressive Party led by Theodore Roosevelt in the presidential campaign of 1912
- bullionism — a person who advocates a system in which currency is directly convertible to gold or silver.
- bumblefoot — a swelling, sometimes purulent, of the ball of the foot in fowl.
- bump along — advance unevenly
- bunglesome — characterized by bungling
- buttonmold — a small disk of wood, metal, etc., which is covered as with cloth or leather to form a button
- campobello — an island in the Bay of Fundy, off the coast of SE Canada: part of New Brunswick province. Pop: 1195 (2001). Area: about 52 sq km (20 sq miles)
- carambolas — Plural form of carambola.
- carom ball — the ball struck by the cue ball in rebounding off the object ball. Compare object ball (def 1).
- catabolism — a metabolic process in which complex molecules are broken down into simple ones with the release of energy; destructive metabolism
- choliambic — relating to or in the form of choliambs
- choliambus — a line of iambic meter with a spondee or trochee replacing the last foot.
- climb down — If you climb down in an argument or dispute, you admit that you are wrong, or change your intentions or demands.
- climb-down — a retreat, as from an indefensible opinion or position.
- cloth beam — a roller, located at the front of a loom, on which woven material is wound after it leaves the breast beam.
- cockwomble — (UK,slang,derogatory) A foolish or obnoxious person.
- collembola — Any of many minute wingless arthropods of subclass Collembola; a springtail.
- columbaria — Irregular plural form of columbarium.
- columbines — Plural form of columbine.
- comb jelly — ctenophore
- combatable — to fight or contend against; oppose vigorously: to combat crime.
- combinable — capable of combining or being combined.
- combinedly — made by combining; joined; united, as in a chemical compound.
- comestible — food
- commonable — (of land) held in common
- commutable — (of a punishment) capable of being reduced in severity
- comparable — Something that is comparable to something else is roughly similar, for example in amount or importance.
- comparably — capable of being compared; having features in common with something else to permit or suggest comparison: He considered the Roman and British empires to be comparable.
- compatable — Misspelling of compatible.