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12-letter words containing b, o, r, e, l

  • hyperboloids — Plural form of hyperboloid.
  • immobilizers — Plural form of immobilizer.
  • impardonable — (obsolete) unpardonable.
  • imperforable — not able to be perforated
  • imponderable — not ponderable; that cannot be precisely determined, measured, or evaluated.
  • imprisonable — capable of being imprisoned or incarcerated
  • incomparable — beyond comparison; matchless or unequaled: incomparable beauty.
  • incorporable — able to be incorporated.
  • incorrigible — not corrigible; bad beyond correction or reform: incorrigible behavior; an incorrigible liar.
  • incorrodible — incapable of being corroded; not corrodible
  • informidable — (obsolete) Not formidable; not to be feared or dreaded.
  • ingleborough — a mountain in N England, in North Yorkshire: potholes. Height: 723 m (2373 ft)
  • inobservable — Unobservable.
  • interlobular — (anatomy) Between lobules.
  • interorbital — Between orbitals.
  • interpolable — able to be interpolated, or suited to interpolation
  • interrogable — capable of being interrogated
  • irreformable — insusceptible to reforming influences; incorrigible.
  • irreformably — in an irreformable manner
  • irreprovable — Not reprovable; irreproachable.
  • irreprovably — in an irreprovable manner
  • irresolvable — not resolvable; incapable of being resolved, analyzable, or solvable.
  • irresolvably — In an irresolvable manner.
  • isobilateral — (esp of a leaf) capable of being divided into symmetrical halves along two different planes
  • jodrell bank — site of a radio astronomy observatory (Nuffield Radio Astronomy Laboratories) in NE Cheshire, England, that operates a 250-foot (76-meter) radio telescope.
  • labor market — the available supply of labor considered with reference to the demand for it.
  • laboratories — a building, part of a building, or other place equipped to conduct scientific experiments, tests, investigations, etc., or to manufacture chemicals, medicines, or the like.
  • labour force — The labour force consists of all the people who are able to work in a country or area, or all the people who work for a particular company.
  • labrador tea — a North American bog shrub, Ledum groenlandicum, of the heath family, having evergreen leaves and rounded clusters of white flowers.
  • late bloomer — a person whose talents or capabilities are slow to develop: A late bloomer, she wrote her first novel when she was almost 50.
  • lay store by — to value or reckon as important
  • le corbusier — (Charles Édouard Jeanneret) 1887–1965, Swiss architect in France.
  • leader block — Nautical. lead block.
  • leader board — a board on which the scores of the leading competitors are displayed, as in a golf tournament.
  • leaderboards — Plural form of leaderboard.
  • leatherbound — Bound in leather.
  • ledger board — a horizontal board, as in a fence.
  • lemon butter — a spread made of butter flavored with lemon
  • letterboxing — Also, letter box. Chiefly British. a public or private mailbox.
  • liberational — Relating to, or aiding, liberation; liberatory.
  • liberty bond — a single Liberty loan bond.
  • liberty loan — any of the five bond issues of the U.S. government floated in World War I.
  • liberty pole — Also called liberty tree. American History. a pole or tree, often with a liberty cap or a banner at the top, usually located on a village green or in a market square, used by the Sons of Liberty in many colonial towns as a symbol of protest against British rule and around which anti-British rallies were held.
  • liberum veto — a veto exercised by a single member of a legislative body whose rules require unanimity.
  • light bomber — a small airplane designed to carry light bomb loads relatively short distances, especially one having a gross loaded weight of less than 100,000 pounds (45,000 kg).
  • lillibullero — a part of the refrain to a song deriding the Irish Roman Catholics, popular in England during and after the revolution of 1688.
  • line probing — A feature of some V.34 modems that will allow them to identify the capacity and quality of the phone line and adjust themselves to allow, for each individual connection, for maximum throughput using the highest possible data transmission rate.
  • lloyd webber — (Sir) Andrew, born 1948, English composer of musical theater.
  • load-bearing — bearing the weight that is carried by a structure
  • lobster moth — a large sombre-hued prominent moth, Stauropus fagi, that when at rest resembles dead leaves. The modified thoracic legs of the larva, carried curled over its body, look like a lobster's claw
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