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

  • booze-up — In Britain, a booze-up is a party or other social gathering where people drink a lot of alcohol.
  • bordeaux — a port in SW France, on the River Garonne: a major centre of the wine trade. Pop: 235 878 (2006)
  • borujerd — city in WC Iran: pop. 201,000
  • bouderie — sulkiness, pouting
  • boudeuse — a sofa or settee, usually upholstered, having two seats with a common backrest between them.
  • boughten — bought at a store and not homemade
  • boulogne — a port in N France, on the English Channel. Pop: 45 036 (2006)
  • bountied — offering a bounty.
  • bourgeon — burgeon
  • bourride — a Mediterranean fish soup flavoured with aioli
  • boursier — a foundation level scholar
  • bourtree — the elder-tree
  • boutique — A boutique is a small shop that sells fashionable clothes, shoes, or jewellery.
  • boutonné — reserved or reticent
  • breakout — If there has been a break-out, someone has escaped from prison.
  • breloque — an ornament or charm attached to a watch chain
  • brochure — A brochure is a magazine or thin book with pictures that gives you information about a product or service.
  • broguery — the use of a brogue or accent
  • bucchero — an Etruscan black ceramic ware, often ornamented with incised geometrical patterns or figures carved in relief.
  • budgerow — a large slow-moving barge formerly used on the Ganges
  • bughouse — a mental hospital or asylum
  • bulldoze — If people bulldoze something such as a building, they knock it down using a bulldozer.
  • 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
  • bunuelos — a thin, round, fried pastry, often dusted with cinnamon sugar.
  • buoyance — the power to float or rise in a fluid; relative lightness.
  • 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.
  • burnoose — a long cloak with a hood, worn by Arabs and Moors
  • burrowed — a hole or tunnel in the ground made by a rabbit, fox, or similar animal for habitation and refuge.
  • burstone — any of various siliceous rocks used for millstones.
  • 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
  • butthole — anus.
  • cobhouse — A structure built of cob.
  • could be — It's possible
  • debouche — an outlet, as for troops to debouch through
  • 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.
  • double xJames Emory ("Jimmie"; "Double X"; "The Beast") 1907–67, U.S. baseball player.
  • double-o — careful scrutiny or close inspection.
  • double-u — the letter w.
  • doublers — Plural form of doubler.
  • doublets — Plural form of doublet.
  • doublure — an ornamental lining of a book cover.
  • doubters — Plural form of doubter.
  • dubonnet — (lowercase) a deep purple-red color.
  • dulbecco — Renato [ruh-nah-toh;; Italian re-nah-taw] /rəˈnɑ toʊ;; Italian rɛˈnɑ tɔ/ (Show IPA), 1914–2012, U.S. biologist, born in Italy: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1975.
  • eboracum — ancient name of York, England.
  • euphobia — Fear of hearing good news.
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