9-letter words containing b, r, e, a, s
- passer-by — a person passing by.
- passersby — a person passing by.
- pea shrub — any of various small trees or shrubs belonging to the genus Caragana, of the legume family, native to central Asia, having showy, usually yellow flowers, cultivated as an ornamental.
- periblast — the protoplasm surrounding the blastoderm in meroblastic eggs
- perusable — having the ability to be perused
- preabsorb — to absorb beforehand or in advance
- pressable — to act upon with steadily applied weight or force.
- pursuable — to follow in order to overtake, capture, kill, etc.; chase.
- rabidness — The property of being rabid.
- raise hob — to cause mischief or disturbance
- raspberry — the fruit of any of several shrubs belonging to the genus Rubus, of the rose family, consisting of small and juicy red, black, or pale yellow drupelets forming a detachable cap about a convex receptacle.
- rate base — a guaranteed minimum amount or number used to compute advertising rates, as the number of subscribers to a publication.
- re-absorb — to suck up or drink in (a liquid); soak up: A sponge absorbs water.
- red brass — an alloy of from 77 to 86 percent copper with the balance zinc; Mannheim gold.
- redbreast — the European robin, Erithacus rubecula.
- resalable — able to be resold; suitable for resale.
- reusables — products that can be used more than once
- reuseable — available or convenient for use: 2000 square feet of usable office space.
- revisable — to amend or alter: to revise one's opinion.
- rheobasic — of or relating to rheobase
- rib steak — club steak.
- rinseable — able to be rinsed
- rubensian — Peter Paul [pee-ter pawl;; Flemish pey-tuh r poul] /ˈpi tər pɔl;; Flemish ˈpeɪ tər paʊl/ (Show IPA), 1577–1640, Flemish painter.
- saber saw — a portable electric jigsaw.
- sabre saw — a portable electric saw with a narrow, oscillating blade
- sabrelike — resembling a sabre
- sabrewing — a large hummingbird of the genus Campylopterous, with long curved wings
- sagebrush — any of several sagelike, bushy composite plants of the genus Artemisia, especially A. tridentata, having silvery, wedge-shaped leaves, with three teeth at the tip, common on the dry plains of the western U.S.
- sarabande — a slow, stately Spanish dance, especially of the 17th and 18th centuries, in triple meter, derived from a vigorous castanet dance.
- sarbacane — a type of blowpipe
- saturable — capable of being saturated.
- saver sub — A saver sub is a short piece of connecting pipe with threads on both ends, which is part of a drill string.
- sawtimber — trees suitable for sawing into planks, boards, etc.
- scrabbled — to scratch or scrape, as with the claws or hands.
- scrambler — a person or thing that scrambles.
- scrapable — to deprive of or free from an outer layer, adhering matter, etc., or to smooth by drawing or rubbing something, especially a sharp or rough instrument, over the surface: to scrape a table to remove paint and varnish.
- scrape by — If someone scrapes by, they earn just enough money to live on with difficulty.
- screwable — able to be screwed
- screwball — Slang. an eccentric or whimsically eccentric person; a nut.
- screwbean — a small tree or shrub of the south-western United States that has edible pods
- scribable — able to be written or written on
- scrutable — capable of being understood by careful study or investigation.
- sea bread — ship biscuit; hardtack.
- sea bream — any of numerous marine sparid fishes, as Pagellus centrodontus, inhabiting waters off the coasts of Europe.
- sea robin — any of various gurnards, especially certain American species of the genus Prionotus, having large pectoral fins used to move across the ocean bottom.
- seborrhea — an excessive and abnormal discharge from the sebaceous glands.
- securable — free from or not exposed to danger or harm; safe.
- semiurban — of, relating to, or designating a city or town.
- separable — capable of being separated, parted, or dissociated.
- serbonian — of, relating to, or designating the large marshy tract of land in the northern part of ancient Egypt in which entire armies are said to have been swallowed up.