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11-letter words containing b, u, r, y

  • rome beauty — a large, red variety of apple, used chiefly for baking.
  • rotary club — a local club of business and professional men that is a member of a world-wide organization of similar clubs (Rotary International) devoted to serving the community and promoting world peace.
  • royal burgh — (in Scotland) a burgh that was established by a royal charter granted directly by the sovereign
  • rubrum lily — either of two cultivated lilies, Lilium auratum rubrum or L. speciosum rubrum, having showy red flowers.
  • ruby silver — proustite.
  • ruby spinel — a deep red, transparent variety of spinel, used as a gem.
  • rugby shirt — a knitted pullover sport shirt usually in bold horizontal stripes and having a white collar and neckline placket, styled after the shirts traditionally worn by the members of Rugby teams.
  • rugby union — a form of rugby football played between teams of 15 players
  • ruling body — authority, group in charge
  • runnability — to move with haste; act quickly: Run upstairs and get the iodine.
  • sauce bercy — Bercy.
  • semishrubby — somewhat resembling a shrub; shrubby in some respects; having characteristics somewhat like those of a shrub; partly covered in shrubs
  • shaftesburyAnthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of, 1621–83, English statesman.
  • spinel ruby — ruby spinel.
  • subaerially — in a subaerial manner
  • subaxillary — situated or placed beneath an axil.
  • subcategory — a subordinate category or a division of a category.
  • subcontrary — one of two propositions that can both be true but cannot both be false.
  • subdeaconry — the position or office of a subdeacon
  • subdermally — in, located, or placed in a subdermal manner
  • subindustry — a subdivision of an industry
  • subliteracy — below average literacy
  • subliterary — not intended as literature
  • subordinacy — a subordinate person or thing.
  • subordinary — any of several heraldic bearings of secondary importance to the ordinary, such as the lozenge, the orle, and the fret
  • subtreasury — a subordinate or branch treasury.
  • syllabarium — syllabary.
  • thrasybulus — died c389 b.c, Athenian patriot and general.
  • thunder bay — a port in W Ontario, in S Canada, on Lake Superior: created in 1970 by the merger of twin cities (Fort William and Port Arthur) and two adjoining townships.
  • touch rugby — a limited-contact version of rugby in which players seek to evade being touched (rather than tackled) while in possession of the ball
  • trolley bus — a passenger bus operating on tires and having an electric motor that draws power from overhead wires.
  • troubetzkoy — N(ikolai) S(ergeievich) [nyi-kuh-lahy syir-gye-yi-vyich] /nyɪ kʌˈlaɪ syɪrˈgyɛ yɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1890–1938, Russian linguist in Austria.
  • trypan blue — dye used for staining cells in biological research
  • tuba player — someone who plays the tuba, a valved brass instrument of bass pitch, in which the bell points upwards and the mouthpiece projects at right angles
  • two-by-four — two units thick and four units wide, especially in inches.
  • unalterably — not capable of being altered, changed, or modified.
  • unarbitrary — subject to individual will or judgment without restriction; contingent solely upon one's discretion: an arbitrary decision.
  • unbrotherly — not brotherly
  • unendurably — in an unendurable manner
  • unfavorably — not favorable; contrary; adverse: an unfavorable wind.
  • unignorably — to refrain from noticing or recognizing: to ignore insulting remarks.
  • unmemorably — in a way that is not memorable
  • unutterably — not communicable by utterance; unspeakable; beyond expression: unutterable joy.
  • unweariably — in an unweariable manner
  • upper darby — a town in SE Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia.
  • urban decay — the decay and deterioration of an urban area due to neglect or age
  • yarboroughs — Plural form of yarborough.
  • yerba buena — an island in San Francisco Bay between Oakland and San Francisco, California: a 500 feet (152 meters) two-story tunnel across this island connects the two spans of the San Francisco–Oakland bridge.
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