6-letter words containing b, o, e
- bowsie — a low-class mean or obstreperous person
- bowtel — boltel (def 1).
- bowtie — a small necktie tied in a bow at the collar.
- bowyer — a person who makes or sells archery bows
- boykie — a chap or fellow
- brecon — a town in SE Wales, in Powys: textile and leather industries. Pop: 7901 (2001)
- brehon — a judge in ancient Ireland
- breton — of, relating to, or characteristic of Brittany, its people, or their language
- broche — woven with a raised design, as brocade
- brodie — a suicidal or daredevil leap; wild dive: to do a brodie from a high ledge.
- brogue — If someone has a brogue, they speak English with a strong accent, especially Irish or Scots.
- 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).
- bronde — (of women's hair) artificially coloured to achieve a shade between blonde and brunette
- bronte — Anne, pen name Acton Bell. 1820–49, English novelist; author of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1847)
- bronze — Bronze is a yellowish-brown metal which is a mixture of copper and tin.
- brooke — Alan Francis
- broose — a race, either on foot or on horseback, amongst the men at a country wedding
- broses — a porridge made by stirring boiling liquid into oatmeal or other meal.
- browed — having a brow of a specified kind (usually used in combination): a shaggy-browed brute.
- browne — Coral (Edith). 1913–91, Australian actress: married to Vincent Price
- browse — If you browse in a shop, you look at things in a fairly casual way, in the hope that you might find something you like.
- buboes — an inflammatory swelling of a lymphatic gland, especially in the groin or armpit.
- 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.
- bygone — Bygone means happening or existing a very long time ago.
- cobaea — any climbing shrub of the tropical American genus Cobaea, esp C. scandens, grown for its large trumpet-shaped purple or white flowers: family Polemoniaceae
- cobber — a friend; mate: used as a term of address to males
- cobble — Cobbles are the same as cobblestones.
- cobden — Richard. 1804–65, British economist and statesman: with John Bright a leader of the successful campaign to abolish the Corn Laws (1846)
- cobweb — A cobweb is the net which a spider makes for catching insects.
- combed — Simple past tense and past participle of comb.
- comber — a person, tool, or machine that combs wool, flax, etc
- combes — Plural form of combe.
- comble — the highest point of achievement or success in something
- coombe — combe.
- corbel — a bracket, usually of stone or brick
- corbie — a crow or raven
- coverb — (grammar) Any of a class of words in various languages including Chinese and Hungarian whose function is analogous to the cases, prepositions and postpositions of other languages.
- debond — To remove a bonding agent such as glue, or to free from such a bonding.
- debone — to remove the bones from (a piece of meat or fish)
- deboss — the method of pressing a design onto a surface so that it creates a sunken area
- debtor — A debtor is a country, organization, or person who owes money.
- demobs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of demob.
- desorb — to change from an adsorbed state on a surface to a gaseous or liquid state
- doable — capable of being done.
- dobbed — Simple past tense and past participle of dob.
- dobber — a float for a fishing line; bob.
- dobell — Sir William. 1899–1970, Australian portrait and landscape painter. Awarded the Archibald prize (1943) for his famous painting of Joshua Smith which resulted in a heated clash between the conservatives and the moderns and led to a lawsuit. His other works include The Cypriot (1940), The Billy Boy (1943), and Portrait of a strapper (1941)
- dobies — Chiefly Southwestern U.S. adobe.