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11-letter words containing b, r, i, s, t, o

  • inobservant — lack of attention; inattention; heedlessness: drowsy inobservance.
  • inobtrusive — unobtrusive.
  • keyboardist — the row or set of keys on a piano, organ, or the like.
  • lignotubers — Plural form of lignotuber.
  • lobsterlike — Resembling a lobster or some aspect of one.
  • locust bird — any of various pratincoles, esp Glareola nordmanni (black-winged pratincole), that feed on locusts
  • lost tribes — the members of the ten tribes of ancient Israel who were taken into captivity in 722 b.c. by Sargon II of Assyria and are believed never to have returned to Palestine. II Kings 17:1–23.
  • maraboutism — Support for marabouts (Muslim holy men or mystics).
  • meroblastic — (of certain eggs) undergoing partial cleavage, resulting in unequal blastomeres.
  • microbursts — Plural form of microburst.
  • morbidities — a morbid state or quality.
  • mossbluiter — the bittern
  • muttonbirds — Plural form of muttonbird.
  • obliterates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of obliterate.
  • obscuration — the act of obscuring.
  • obscurities — Plural form of obscurity.
  • obsecration — to entreat solemnly; beseech; supplicate.
  • observation — an act or instance of noticing or perceiving.
  • observative — Observant; watchful.
  • obsignatory — (obsolete) Ratifying; confirming by sealing.
  • obstetrical — of or relating to the care and treatment of women in childbirth and during the period before and after delivery.
  • obstriction — the condition of being under an obligation, or a duty or compulsion that causes obligation
  • obstructing — Present participle of obstruct.
  • obstruction — something that obstructs, blocks, or closes up with an obstacle or obstacles; obstacle or hindrance: obstructions to navigation.
  • obstructive — to block or close up with an obstacle; make difficult to pass: Debris obstructed the road.
  • obtrusively — having or showing a disposition to obtrude, as by imposing oneself or one's opinions on others.
  • old british — Brythonic as used before a.d. 800.
  • postorbital — located behind the orbit or socket of the eye.
  • pro-british — of or relating to Great Britain or its inhabitants.
  • protrusible — able to be thrust outwards
  • rooibos tea — tea prepared from any of several species of Borbonia or Aspalanthus, believed to have tonic properties
  • rumbustious — rambunctious.
  • saburration — the use of heated sand in healing
  • saprobiotic — saprobic
  • sorbability — the ability of something to absorb
  • southbridge — a town in S Massachusetts.
  • stereobatic — relating to or resembling a stereobate
  • stereoblind — lacking the ability to see in three dimensions through both eyes
  • sternotribe — (of a flower) having contact with the sternum of an insect
  • stilbestrol — a nonsteroidal synthetic estrogen, C 18 H 20 O 2 , used in medicine chiefly in the treatment of menopausal symptoms and in animal feeds for chemical caponization: formerly used during pregnancy for the prevention of miscarriage but discontinued owing to its association with an increased risk of vaginal and cervical cancers in women having had fetal exposure. Abbreviation: DES.
  • storability — capable of being stored for considerable time without loss of freshness or usability.
  • stourbridge — an industrial town in W central England, in Dudley unitary authority, West Midlands. Pop: 55 480 (2001)
  • strikebound — closed by a strike: a strikebound factory.
  • stringboard — a board or facing covering the ends of the steps in a staircase.
  • strombolian — relating to or denoting a type of volcanic eruption characterized by repeated fountaining or jetting of fluid lava into the air
  • subarration — an ancient way of marrying by giving a ring or gift
  • subcortical — situated beneath the cortex.
  • subdirector — an assistant or secondary director
  • subfraction — Mathematics. a number usually expressed in the form a/b. a ratio of algebraic quantities similarly expressed.
  • sublittoral — of or relating to the biogeographic region of the ocean bottom between the littoral and bathyal zones, from the low water line to the edge of the continental shelf, or to a depth of approximately 660 feet (200 meters).
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