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5-letter words containing b, t

  • biont — a living thing
  • biota — the plant and animal life of a particular region or period
  • birth — When a baby is born, you refer to this event as his or her birth.
  • bisto — a preparation for thickening, flavouring, and browning gravy
  • bitch — If someone calls a woman a bitch, they are saying in a very rude way that they think she behaves in a very unpleasant way.
  • biter — a person or animal that bites, especially habitually or viciously: That dog is a biter.
  • bitsy — very small
  • bitte — you're welcome!
  • bitty — If you say that something is bitty, you mean that it seems to be formed from a lot of different parts which you think do not fit together or go together well.
  • bizet — Georges (ʒɔrʒ). 1838–75, French composer, whose works include the opera Carmen (1875) and incidental music to Daudet's L'Arlésienne (1872)
  • blart — to sound loudly and harshly
  • blast — A blast is a big explosion, especially one caused by a bomb.
  • blate — exhibiting corpselike qualities, for example a pallid tone, insensibility, or lack of spirits
  • blatt — a newspaper
  • bleat — When a sheep or goat bleats, it makes the sound that sheep and goats typically make.
  • blent — blend
  • blert — a fool
  • blest — bless
  • blite — any of a variety of plants in the family Chenopodiaceae, esp Amaranthus blitum
  • blitt — Bachelor of Letters
  • blitz — If a city or building is blitzed during a war, it is attacked by bombs dropped by enemy aircraft.
  • bloat — to swell or cause to swell, as with a liquid, air, or wind
  • bluet — a North American rubiaceous plant, Houstonia caerulea, with small four-petalled blue flowers
  • blunt — If you are blunt, you say exactly what you think without trying to be polite.
  • blurt — If someone blurts something, they say it suddenly, after trying hard to keep quiet or to keep it secret.
  • blyth — a port in N England, in SE Northumberland, on the North Sea. Pop: 35 691 (2001)
  • boart — low-quality diamond, in granular aggregate or small fragments, valuable only in crushed or powdered form, especially for industrial use as an abrasive.
  • boast — If someone boasts about something that they have done or that they own, they talk about it very proudly, in a way that other people may find irritating or offensive.
  • boite — a small nightclub, cabaret, or restaurant
  • boito — Arrigo (arˈriɡo). 1842–1918, Italian operatic composer and librettist, whose works include the opera Mefistofele (1868) and the librettos for Verdi's Otello and Falstaff
  • bolts — a movable bar or rod that when slid into a socket fastens a door, gate, etc.
  • boost — If one thing boosts another, it causes it to increase, improve, or be more successful.
  • booth — A booth is a small area separated from a larger public area by screens or thin walls where, for example, people can make a telephone call or vote in private.
  • bootp — The Bootstrap Protocol. A protocol described in RFCs 951 and 1084 and used for booting diskless workstations. See also Reverse Address Resolution Protocol.
  • boots — (formerly) a shoeblack who cleans the guests' shoes in a hotel
  • booty — Booty is a collection of valuable things stolen from a place, especially by soldiers after a battle.
  • borty — low-quality diamond, in granular aggregate or small fragments, valuable only in crushed or powdered form, especially for industrial use as an abrasive.
  • bortz — low-quality diamond, in granular aggregate or small fragments, valuable only in crushed or powdered form, especially for industrial use as an abrasive.
  • botch — If you botch something that you are doing, you do it badly or clumsily.
  • botel — a waterside hotel with dock space for persons who travel by boat.
  • botha — Louis. 1862–1919, South African statesman and general; first prime minister of the Union of South Africa (1910–19)
  • bothe — Walther (Wilhelm Georg Franz) (ˈvaltər). 1891–1957, German physicist, who developed new methods of detecting subatomic particles. He shared the Nobel prize for physics 1954
  • bothy — a cottage or hut
  • botox — Botox is a substance that is injected into the face in order to make the skin look smoother.
  • botte — a thrust or hit
  • botty — the buttocks
  • boult — Sir Adrian (Cedric). 1889–1983, English conductor
  • bouts — a contest or trial of strength, as of boxing.
  • bovet — Daniel. 1907–92, Italian pharmacologist, born in Switzerland, noted for his pioneering work on antihistamine drugs. Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1957
  • bowat — a small lamp or lantern
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