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10-letter words containing b, r, a, n

  • barbarians — Plural form of barbarian.
  • barbecuing — Present participle of barbecue.
  • bare bones — The bare bones of something are its most basic parts or details.
  • bare owner — a person who has bare ownership of a property
  • barehanded — without weapons, tools, etc
  • barenecked — Having the neck bare.
  • bargain on — to rely or depend on (something)
  • bargainers — Plural form of bargainer.
  • bargaining — an advantageous purchase, especially one acquired at less than the usual cost: The sale offered bargains galore.
  • bargainous — (informal) cheap (characteristic of a bargain).
  • bargestone — any of several stones forming the sloping edge of a gable.
  • barkantine — a sailing vessel having three or more masts, square-rigged on the foremast and fore-and-aft-rigged on the other masts.
  • barkentine — a sailing ship of three or more masts rigged square on the foremast and fore-and-aft on the others
  • barkhausen — Heinrich Georg. 1881–1956, German physicist; discovered that ferromagnetic material in an increasing magnetic field becomes magnetized in discrete jumps (the Barkhausen effect)
  • barleycorn — a grain of barley, or barley itself
  • barn dance — A barn dance is a social event people go to for country dancing.
  • barn grass — a weedy, coarse grass, Echinochloa crus-galli, having a spikelike cluster of flowers.
  • barnardo's — a charity, founded by Thomas John Barnardo, that supports vulnerable children and young people
  • barnburner — something, esp. a closely contested sports event, that is very exciting, intense, dramatic, etc.
  • barneveldt — ˈJan van Olden (ˌjɑnˈvɑn ɔldən ) ; yänˌvän ôlˈdən) 1547-1619; Du. statesman & patriot
  • barnstable — a city in SE Massachusetts.
  • barnstaple — a town in SW England, in Devon, on the estuary of the River Taw: tourism, agriculture. Pop: 30 765 (2001)
  • baroclinic — of, relating to, or having the property of baroclinity.
  • barognosis — the ability to judge weight
  • baronesses — Plural form of baroness.
  • baronetage — the order of baronets; baronets collectively
  • baronetess — the wife of a baronet
  • baronetize — to make (someone) a baronet; confer a baronetcy upon.
  • barpersons — Plural form of barperson.
  • barracking — Present participle of barrack.
  • barramunda — the edible Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, having paddle-like fins and a long body covered with large scales
  • barramundi — any of several large edible Australian fishes esp the percoid species Lates calcarifer (family Centropomidae) of NE coastal waters or the freshwater species Scleropages leichardti (family Osteoglossidae) of Queensland
  • barrelling — a cylindrical wooden container with slightly bulging sides made of staves hooped together, and with flat, parallel ends.
  • barrenness — not producing or incapable of producing offspring; sterile: a barren woman.
  • barrenwort — a herbaceous European berberidaceous plant, Epimedium alpinum, having red-and-yellow star-shaped flowers
  • barrington — Jonah. born 1940, British squash player; winner of the Open Championship 1966–67, 1969–72
  • bartenders — Plural form of bartender.
  • bartending — to serve or work as a bartender.
  • barycenter — (physics) The center of a mass; often specifically, the point at which the gravitational forces exerted by two objects are equal.
  • barycentre — a centre of mass, esp of the earth-moon system or the solar system
  • baseburner — a stove into which coal is automatically fed from a hopper above the fire chamber
  • baseliners — Plural form of baseliner.
  • baseperson — (baseball, softball) A fielder (of either gender) positioned near a base.
  • baserunner — a baseball player in the act of running around bases
  • bat around — to discuss (an idea, proposition, etc) informally
  • batrachian — any amphibian, esp a frog or toad
  • battenburg — an oblong sponge cake divided longitudinally into four square sections, two coloured pink and two yellow, with an outer coating of marzipan
  • batterings — Plural form of battering.
  • baumgarten — Alexander Gottlieb. 1714–62, German philosopher, noted for his pioneering work on aesthetics, a term that he originated
  • bay antler — the second branch from the base of a deer's horn
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