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7-letter words containing b, u, e

  • bugayev — Boris Nikolayevich [bawr-is nik-uh-lahy-uh-vich,, bohr-,, bor-;; Russian buh-ryees nyi-kuh-lah-yi-vyich] /ˈbɔr ɪs ˌnɪk əˈlaɪ ə vɪtʃ,, ˈboʊr-,, ˌbɒr-;; Russian bʌˈryis nyɪ kʌˈlɑ yɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), Bely, Andrei.
  • bugbane — any of several ranunculaceous plants of the genus Cimicifuga, esp C. foetida of Europe, whose flowers are reputed to repel insects
  • bugbear — Something or someone that is your bugbear worries or upsets you.
  • bugeyed — with bulging eyes, as from surprise or wonderment; astonished.
  • buggery — Buggery is anal intercourse.
  • bugseed — any tumbleweed of the genus Corispermum, native to North America and Eurasia and found in fields and areas of wasteland
  • builder — A builder is a person whose job is to build or repair houses and other buildings.
  • bukkake — a sexual practice in which several men ejaculate on the face of an individual woman
  • bukshee — a paymaster-general in the Anglo-Indian army
  • bulblet — a small bulb or bulblike structure, especially one growing in the axils of leaves, as in the tiger lily, or replacing flowers, as in the onion.
  • bulkage — any agent that aids peristalsis by increasing the bulk of material in the intestine
  • bullace — a small Eurasian rosaceous tree, Prunus domestica insititia (or P. insititia), of which the damson is the cultivated form
  • bullate — puckered or blistered in appearance
  • bullets — a small metal projectile, part of a cartridge, for firing from small arms.
  • bullied — a blustering, quarrelsome, overbearing person who habitually badgers and intimidates smaller or weaker people.
  • bullier — a blustering, quarrelsome, overbearing person who habitually badgers and intimidates smaller or weaker people.
  • bullpen — In baseball, a bullpen is an area alongside the playing field, where pitchers can practice or warm up.
  • bumbaze — to confuse; bewilder
  • bumbler — to bungle or blunder awkwardly; muddle: He somehow bumbled through two years of college.
  • bumelia — a thorny shrub of the genus Bumelia
  • bumster — (of trousers) cut low so as to reveal the top part of the buttocks
  • bunched — a connected group; cluster: a bunch of grapes.
  • bunches — a hairstyle in which hair is tied into two sections on either side of the head at the back
  • bundies — a time clock.
  • bundled — (of hardware or software) sold together, as a package, rather than separately.
  • bungest — out of order; broken; unusable.
  • bungled — to do clumsily and awkwardly; botch: He bungled the job.
  • bungler — A bungler is a person who often fails to do things properly because they make mistakes or are clumsy.
  • bunnies — Informal. a rabbit, especially a small or young one.
  • bunuelo — a thin, round, fried pastry, often dusted with cinnamon sugar.
  • buoyage — a system of buoys
  • burbage — James. ?1530–97, English actor and theatre manager, who built (1576) the first theatre in England
  • bureaux — Bureaux is a plural form of bureau.
  • burette — a graduated glass tube with a stopcock on one end for dispensing and transferring known volumes of fluids, esp liquids
  • burgage — (in England) tenure of land or tenement in a town or city, which originally involved a fixed money rent
  • burgeon — If something burgeons, it grows or develops rapidly.
  • burgess — a citizen or freeman of a borough
  • burgher — The burghers of a town or city are the people who live there, especially the richer or more respectable people.
  • burke'sMartha Jane, 1852?–1903, Calamity Jane.
  • burkite — burker; murderer
  • burlesk — a bawdy comedy show of the late 19th and early 20th centuries: the striptease eventually became one of its chief elements
  • burmese — Burmese means belonging or relating to Burma, or to its people, language, or culture. Burma is now known as Myanmar.
  • burnett — Frances Hodgson (ˈhɒdʒsən). 1849–1924, US novelist, born in England; author of Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886) and The Secret Garden (1911)
  • burnley — an industrial town in NW England, in E Lancashire. Pop: 73 021 (2001)
  • burrell — Paul. born 1958, British butler and confidant to Diana, Princess of Wales. After her death he was charged with but (2003) acquitted of stealing from her estate. His book, A Royal Duty (2003), revealed intimate details of her life
  • burrhel — a wild sheep, Pseudois nahoor, of Tibet and adjacent mountainous regions, having goatlike horns that curve backward.
  • bursate — resembling or containing a bursa
  • burseed — a plant, Lapulla echinata, with adhesive seeds
  • bursera — of or relating to the Bursera genus of gum trees
  • bursted — to break, break open, or fly apart with sudden violence: The bitter cold caused the pipes to burst.
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