0%

7-letter words containing b, r, e, d

  • debeard — to remove the beard or thready tuft from (someone or something)
  • debitor — the heading written at the top of the debit column in an accounts book
  • deboard — To exit a form of transportation such as a boat, ship, airplane, trolley, streetcar or spaceship.
  • deboner — a person or a device that debones a piece of meat or fish
  • deborah — a prophetess and judge of Israel who fought the Canaanites (Judges 4, 5)
  • debrett — a list of the British aristocracy
  • debride — to remove (dead tissue or extraneous material) from a wound
  • debrief — When someone such as a soldier, diplomat, or astronaut is debriefed, they are asked to give a report on an operation or task that they have just completed.
  • debtors — Plural form of debtor.
  • decibar — a centimeter-gram-second unit of pressure, equal to 1/10 bar or 100,000 dynes per square centimeter.
  • defiber — defibrate.
  • delbert — a male given name, form of Albert.
  • deliber — (obsolete) To deliberate.
  • deorbit — to depart deliberately from orbit, usually to enter a descent phase.
  • derbent — a port in S Russia, in the Dagestan Republic on the Caspian Sea: founded by the Persians in the 6th century. Pop: 106 000 (2005 est)
  • derbies — Plural form of derby.
  • dibbers — Plural form of dibber.
  • dibbler — Also, dibber [dib-er] /ˈdɪb ər/ (Show IPA). a small, handheld, pointed implement for making holes in soil for planting seedlings, bulbs, etc.
  • dilbert — (humour)   A cartoon computer worker drawn by Scott Adams <[email protected]>, who works in Silicon Valley. The cartoon became so popular he left his day job. The cartoon satirises typical corporate life, especially that which revolves around computers. See also: BOFH.
  • disrobe — Take off one's clothes.
  • dobbers — Plural form of dobber.
  • doubler — One who doubles.
  • doubter — to be uncertain about; consider questionable or unlikely; hesitate to believe.
  • drabbed — Simple past tense and past participle of drab.
  • drabber — Comparative form of drab.
  • drabbet — a yellowish-brown fabric of coarse linen
  • drabbleMargaret, born 1939, English novelist.
  • dribbed — Simple past tense and past participle of drib.
  • dribber — a person who shoots arrows weakly
  • dribble — to fall or flow in drops or small quantities; trickle.
  • driblet — a small portion or part.
  • drubbed — Simple past tense and past participle of drub.
  • drubber — A person who gives someone a drubbing.
  • drumble — to be inactive or sluggish
  • dryable — Which can be dried.
  • drybeat — to beat (someone) severely
  • durable — able to resist wear, decay, etc., well; lasting; enduring.
  • earbuds — Plural form of earbud.
  • embraid — to braid or interweave
  • embread — to braid
  • enrobed — Simple past tense and past participle of enrobe.
  • fibered — (of plaster) having an admixture of hair or fiber.
  • forbade — a simple past tense of forbid.
  • forbode — A forbidding, prohibition.
  • freebsd — (operating system)   A free operating system based on the BSD 4.4-lite release from Computer Systems Research Group at the University of California at Berkeley. FreeBSD requires an ISA, EISA, VESA, or PCI based computer with an Intel 80386SX to Pentium CPU (or compatible AMD or Cyrix CPU) with 4 megabytes of RAM and 60MB of disk space. Some of FreeBSD's features are: preemptive multitasking with dynamic priority adjustment to ensure smooth and fair sharing of the computer between applications and users. Multiuser access - peripherals such as printers and tape drives can be shared between all users. Complete TCP/IP networking including SLIP, PPP, NFS and NIS. Memory protection, demand-paged virtual memory with a merged VM/buffer cache design. FreeBSD was designed as a 32 bit operating system. X Window System (X11R6) provides a graphical user interface. Binary compatibility with many programs built for SCO, BSDI, NetBSD, 386BSD, and Linux. Hundreds of ready-to-run applications in the FreeBSD ports collection. FreeBSD is source code compatible with most popular commercial Unix systems and thus most applications require few, if any, changes to compile. Shared libraries. A full compliment of C, C++, Fortran and Perl development tools and many other languages. Source code for the entire system is available. Extensive on-line documentation.
  • garbled — to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: to garble instructions.
  • gibberd — Sir Frederick. 1908–84, British architect and town planner. His buildings include the Liverpool Roman Catholic cathedral (1960–67) and the Regent's Park Mosque in London (1977). Harlow in the UK and Santa Teresa in Venezuela were built to his plans
  • grabbed — to seize suddenly or quickly; snatch; clutch: He grabbed me by the collar.
  • grubbed — Simple past tense and past participle of grub.
  • halberd — a shafted weapon with an axlike cutting blade, beak, and apical spike, used especially in the 15th and 16th centuries.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?