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7-letter words containing b, t, r

  • breaths — the air inhaled and exhaled in respiration.
  • breathy — If someone has a breathy voice, you can hear their breath when they speak or sing.
  • brenton — Howard. born 1942, British dramatist, author of such controversial plays as The Churchill Play (1974), The Romans in Britain (1980), (with David Hare) Pravda (1985), and several topical satires with Tariq Ali
  • brevete — patented
  • brevity — The brevity of something is the fact that it is short or lasts for only a short time.
  • bridget — 453–523 ad, Irish abbess; a patron saint of Ireland. Feast day: Feb 1
  • brights — the high beam of the headlights of a motor vehicle
  • brintonDaniel Garrison, 1837–99, U.S. physician, archaeologist, and anthropologist.
  • briquet — briquette.
  • brisket — Brisket is a cut of beef that comes from the breast of the cow.
  • brissot — Jacques-Pierre (ʒakpjɛr). 1754–93, French journalist and revolutionary; leader of the Girondists: executed by the Jacobins
  • bristle — Bristles are the short hairs that grow on a man's chin after he has shaved. The hairs on the top of a man's head can also be called bristles when they are cut very short.
  • bristly — Bristly hair is thick and rough.
  • bristol — seaport in Avon, SW England: county district pop. 376,000
  • bristow — Eric. born 1957, British darts player: world champion five times (1980–81, 1984–86)
  • britain — Great Britain.
  • britart — a movement in modern British art beginning in the late 1980s, often conceptual or using controversial materials, including such artists as Damien Hirst and Rachel Whiteread
  • britcom — a comedy, especially a television series, made in the United Kingdom.
  • british — British means belonging or relating to the United Kingdom, or to its people or culture.
  • britpop — Britpop is a type of pop music made by British bands. It was especially popular in the mid-1990s.
  • britten — (Edward) Benjamin, Baron Britten. 1913–76, English composer, pianist, and conductor. His works include the operas Peter Grimes (1945) and Billy Budd (1951), the choral works Hymn to St Cecilia (1942) and A War Requiem (1962), and numerous orchestral pieces
  • brittle — An object or substance that is brittle is hard but easily broken.
  • brittonNathaniel Lord, 1859–1934, U.S. botanist.
  • britzka — a long horse-drawn carriage with a folding top over the rear seat and a rear-facing front seat
  • brocket — any small deer of the genus Mazama, of tropical America, having small unbranched antlers
  • brokest — a simple past tense of break.
  • bromate — any salt or ester of bromic acid, containing the monovalent group -BrO3 or ion BrO3–
  • brothel — A brothel is a building where men can go to pay to have sex with prostitutes.
  • brother — Your brother is a boy or a man who has the same parents as you.
  • brotula — any of several chiefly deep-sea fishes of the family Brotulidae.
  • brought — Brought is the past tense and past participle of bring.
  • brouter — A device which bridges some packets (i.e. forwards based on data link layer information) and routes other packets (i.e. forwards based on network layer information). The bridge/route decision is based on configuration information.
  • brucite — the mineral form of magnesium hydroxide, translucent and white or pale green in colour
  • bruited — to voice abroad; rumor (used chiefly in the passive and often followed by about): The report was bruited through the village.
  • bruiter — a person who spreads a rumour
  • brutely — in a brutish manner
  • bruting — the primary step in diamond cutting in which the girdle is shaped, often with another diamond
  • brutish — If you describe a person or their behaviour as brutish, you think that they are brutal and uncivilised.
  • brutism — the characteristic actions of a brute
  • brython — a Celt who speaks a Brythonic language
  • btrieve — 1.   (company)   BTRIEVE Technologies, Inc.. 2.   (tool)   A trademark of BTRIEVE Technologies, Inc. for their ISAM index file manager for IBM PCs.
  • bumster — (of trousers) cut low so as to reveal the top part of the buttocks
  • burette — a graduated glass tube with a stopcock on one end for dispensing and transferring known volumes of fluids, esp liquids
  • burkite — burker; murderer
  • burnett — Frances Hodgson (ˈhɒdʒsən). 1849–1924, US novelist, born in England; author of Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886) and The Secret Garden (1911)
  • burnout — If someone suffers burnout, they exhaust themselves at an early stage in their life or career because they have achieved too much too quickly.
  • burrito — A burrito is a tortilla containing a filling of ground beef, chicken, cheese, or beans.
  • bursate — resembling or containing a bursa
  • bursted — to break, break open, or fly apart with sudden violence: The bitter cold caused the pipes to burst.
  • burster — a person or thing that bursts.
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