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7-letter words containing b, r, o

  • baranov — Aleksandr Andreyevich [uh-lyi-ksahn-dr uhn-drye-yi-vyich] /ʌ lyɪˈksɑn dr ʌnˈdryɛ yɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1747–1819, Russian fur trader in Alaska.
  • barbola — small models of flowers and fruit made from plastic paste for decorative purposes
  • barbour — John. c. 1320–95, Scottish poet: author of The Bruce (1376), a patriotic epic poem
  • barbudo — beardfish.
  • barcode — a machine-readable arrangement of numbers and parallel lines of different widths printed on a package, which can be electronically scanned at a checkout to register the price of the goods and to activate computer stock-checking and reordering
  • bargoon — a bargain
  • barmpot — a foolish or deranged person
  • barnlot — barnyard.
  • baronet — A baronet is a man who has been made a knight. When a baronet dies, the title is passed on to his son.
  • baronne — baroness
  • baroque — Baroque architecture and art is an elaborate style of architecture and art that was popular in Europe in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.
  • barotse — a member of a Negroid people of central Africa living chiefly in SW Zambia
  • barozzi — Giacomo [jah-kaw-maw] /ˈdʒɑ kɔ mɔ/ (Show IPA), Vignola, Giacomo da.
  • barrico — a small barrel or similar container for liquids
  • barrios — Justo Rufino [hoo-staw roo-fee-naw] /ˈhu stɔ ruˈfi nɔ/ (Show IPA), 1835–85, Guatemalan statesman: president of Guatemala 1873–85.
  • barroom — A barroom is a room or building in which alcoholic drinks are served over a counter.
  • barroso — José Manuel (ʒoˈse maˈnwɛl) born 1956, Portuguese politician; prime minister of Portugal (2002–04); president of the European Commission (2004–2014)
  • barrows — Plural form of barrow.
  • barstow — a city in S California.
  • barthou — (Jean) Louis [zhahn lwee] /ʒɑ̃ lwi/ (Show IPA), 1862–1934, French statesman and author.
  • bartoli — Cecilia. born 1966, Italian mezzo-soprano, noted for her performances in Mozart and Rossini operas
  • barwood — a red wood from a small African tree, Baphia nitida, primarily used to produce dye and in the construction of violin bows
  • baryons — Plural form of baryon.
  • baryton — a bass viol with sympathetic strings as well as its six main strings
  • bastrop — a city in N Louisiana.
  • battero — a heavy club
  • bear on — to be relevant to; relate to
  • becrowd — to crowd greatly with something
  • bedcord — A cord or rope interwoven in a bedstead so as to support the bed.
  • bedford — a town in SE central England, in Bedfordshire, on the River Ouse; administrative centre of Bedford unitary authority. Pop: 82 488 (2001)
  • bedform — (geology) One of a series of hollows and ripples formed in the bed of a river by the flow of water.
  • bednorz — J(ohannes) Georg [yoh-hah-nuh s gey-awrk] /yoʊˈhɑ nəs ˈgeɪ ɔrk/ (Show IPA), born 1950, German physicist: Nobel Prize 1987.
  • bedrock — The bedrock of something is the principles, ideas, or facts on which it is based.
  • bedroll — A bedroll is a rolled-up sleeping bag or other form of bedding, which you can carry with you.
  • bedroom — A bedroom is a room used for sleeping in.
  • bedsore — Bedsores are sore places on a person's skin, caused by having to lie in bed for a long time without changing position.
  • begored — smeared with a sticky substance
  • begorra — an emphatic exclamation, regarded as a characteristic utterance of Irish people
  • begroan — to groan at or about
  • belabor — If you say that someone belabors the point, you mean that they keep on talking about it, perhaps in an annoying or boring way.
  • belfort — a fortress town in E France: strategically situated in the Belfort Gap between the Vosges and the Jura mountains. Pop: 50 417 (1999)
  • beograd — Belgrade
  • beprose — to reduce to prose
  • bergamo — a walled city in N Italy, in Lombardy. Pop: 113 143 (2001)
  • bergson — Henri Louis (ɑ̃ri lwi). 1859–1941, French philosopher, who sought to bridge the gap between metaphysics and science. His main works are Memory and Matter (1896, trans. 1911) and Creative Evolution (1907, trans. 1911): Nobel prize for literature 1927
  • berlioz — Hector (Louis) (ɛktɔr). 1803–69, French composer, regarded as a pioneer of modern orchestration. His works include the cantata La Damnation de Faust (1846), the operas Les Troyens (1856–59) and Béatrice et Bénédict (1860–62), the Symphonie fantastique (1830), and the oratorio L'Enfance du Christ (1854)
  • bermejo — a river in Argentina, rising in the northwest and flowing southeast to the Paraguay River. Length: about 1600 km (1000 miles)
  • berobed — wearing a robe
  • bescour — to scour thoroughly
  • besport — to amuse (oneself)
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