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8-letter words containing b, u, e, n

  • braeburn — a variety of eating apple from New Zealand having sweet flesh and green and red skin
  • braunite — a brown or black mineral that consists of manganese oxide and silicate and is a source of manganese. Formula: 3Mn2O3.MnSiO3
  • breadnut — a moraceous tree, Brosimum alicastrum, of Central America and the Caribbean
  • bren gun — an air-cooled gas-operated light machine gun taking .303 calibre ammunition: used by British and Commonwealth forces in World War II
  • bruckner — Anton (ˈantoːn). 1824–96, Austrian composer and organist in the Romantic tradition. His works include nine symphonies, four masses, and a Te Deum
  • bruncher — a person who eats brunch
  • brunette — A brunette is a white-skinned woman or girl with dark brown hair.
  • brunizem — a type of dark prairie soil
  • bubaline — (of antelopes) relating to or resembling the bubal
  • buckbean — a marsh plant, Menyanthes trifoliata, with white or pink flowers: family Menyanthaceae
  • buginese — a member of a Muslim people inhabiting the southern part of Sulawesi.
  • bull pen — Baseball. a place where relief pitchers warm up during a game. the relief pitchers on a team.
  • bulletin — A bulletin is a short news report on the radio or television.
  • bullgine — a steam locomotive
  • bullneck — an enlarged neck
  • bullnose — a rounded exterior angle, as where two walls meet
  • buncombe — bunkum
  • bunghole — a hole in a cask, barrel, etc, through which liquid can be poured or drained
  • bunk bed — Bunk beds are two beds fixed one above the other in a frame.
  • bunkmate — a person who sleeps in the same quarters as another
  • buntline — one of several lines fastened to the foot of a square sail for hauling it up to the yard when furling
  • bunuelos — a thin, round, fried pastry, often dusted with cinnamon sugar.
  • buoyance — the power to float or rise in a fluid; relative lightness.
  • burdened — If you are burdened with something, it causes you a lot of worry or hard work.
  • burdener — a person who burdens
  • burgonet — a light 16th-century helmet, usually made of steel, with hinged cheekpieces
  • burgoyne — John. 1722–92, British general in the War of American Independence who was forced to surrender at Saratoga (1777)
  • burleson — a city in N Texas.
  • burnable — able to be burned
  • burnoose — a long cloak with a hood, worn by Arabs and Moors
  • burnside — land along the side of a burn
  • burstone — any of various siliceous rocks used for millstones.
  • bus lane — A bus lane is a part of the road which is intended to be used only by buses.
  • bus line — the route of a bus or buses.
  • bushline — an airline that flies over sparsely inhabited territory to serve isolated settlements.
  • bushnellDavid, 1742?–1824, U.S. inventor: pioneered in submarine construction.
  • business — Business is work relating to the production, buying, and selling of goods or services.
  • buskined — relating to tragic drama
  • bustline — the shape or size of a woman's bust
  • busyness — the quality or condition of being busy.
  • but then — You use but then before a remark which suggests that what you have just said should not be regarded as surprising.
  • butanone — a colourless soluble flammable liquid used mainly as a solvent for resins, as a paint remover, and in lacquers, cements, and adhesives. Formula: CH3COC2H5
  • butt end — butt1 (defs 1, 2).
  • butylene — any of four alkenes, including isobutylene, having the same formula, C4H8, but differing in properties and structure
  • canegrub — any of various grubs that are a pest of sugar cane, esp, in Australia, the greyback canegrub, Dermolepida albohirtum
  • cherubin — Obsolete form of cherub.
  • cleburne — a city in N Texas, near Fort Worth.
  • cube van — a van with a cube-shaped storage compartment that is wider and taller than the front of the vehicle
  • debounce — To remove the small ripple of current that forms when a mechanical switch is pushed in an electrical circuit and makes a series of short contacts.
  • debunked — Simple past tense and past participle of debunk.
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