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7-letter words containing b, u

  • tubings — material in the form of a tube: glass tubing.
  • tublike — resembling a tub in shape
  • tubular — having the form or shape of a tube; tubiform.
  • tubuli- — tubule or tubular
  • tubulin — either of two globular proteins that form the structural subunits of microtubules.
  • tuckbox — a box used for carrying and storing food, esp one taken to boarding school
  • tugboat — a small, powerful boat for towing or pushing ships, barges, etc.
  • tumbler — a person who performs leaps, somersaults, and other bodily feats.
  • tumbrel — one of the carts used during the French Revolution to convey victims to the guillotine.
  • tumbril — one of the carts used during the French Revolution to convey victims to the guillotine.
  • tunable — capable of being tuned.
  • tunably — in a way that is able to be tuned
  • turbary — land, or a piece of land, where turf or peat may be dug or cut.
  • turbine — any of various machines having a rotor, usually with vanes or blades, driven by the pressure, momentum, or reactive thrust of a moving fluid, as steam, water, hot gases, or air, either occurring in the form of free jets or as a fluid passing through and entirely filling a housing around the rotor.
  • turbo c — (language)   Borland's C compiler for IBM PCs. Turbo C, version 1.0, was introduced by Borland in 1987. It offered the first integrated edit-compile-run development environment for C on IBM PCs. It ran in 384KB of memory. It allowed inline assembly, supported all memory models, and offered optimisations for speed, size, constant folding, and jump elimination. Version 1.5 shipped on five 360 KB diskettes of uncompressed files, and came with sample C programs, including a stripped down spreadsheet called mcalc. Turbo C 2.0 has a debugger, a fast assembler, and an extensive graphics library. Turbo C has been largely supplanted by Turbo C++, introduced circa September, 1990 for both MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows.
  • u-boats — a German submarine.
  • uberaba — a city in E Brazil.
  • uberize — to subject (an industry) to a business model in which services are offered on demand through direct contact between a customer and a supplier, usually via mobile technology
  • uberous — fertile; abundant; fruitful
  • ufo bug — (humour)   A bug reported over and over again by users who believe it is real even after they have been shown that it doesn't exist.
  • umberto — Humbert I.
  • umbonal — having the shape or appearance of an umbo; bosslike: an umbonal structure.
  • umbrage — offense; annoyance; displeasure: to feel umbrage at a social snub; to give umbrage to someone; to take umbrage at someone's rudeness.
  • umbrere — (on armour) a helmet visor
  • umbrian — of or relating to Umbria, its inhabitants, or their language.
  • umbriel — a moon of the planet Uranus.
  • umbrous — shady or shadowed
  • umbundu — Mbundu (def 2).
  • unbaked — not having been baked
  • unbased — the bottom support of anything; that on which a thing stands or rests: a metal base for the table.
  • unbated — not abated; undiminished; unlessened.
  • unbeget — to undo the creation of something
  • unbegun — not commenced; not yet started
  • unbeing — the state of non-being; non-existence
  • unberth — Nautical. to allot to (a vessel) a certain space at which to anchor or tie up. to bring to or install in a berth, anchorage, or moorage: The captain had to berth the ship without the aid of tugboats.
  • unbless — to deprive of a blessing
  • unblind — not blind
  • unblock — to remove a block or obstruction from: to unblock a channel; to unblock a person's credit.
  • unblown — (of a flower) still in the bud
  • unboned — lacking bones.
  • unborne — not carried
  • unbosom — to disclose (a confidence, secret, etc.).
  • unbound — simple past tense and past participle of unbind.
  • unbowed — not bowed or bent.
  • unbrace — to remove the braces of.
  • unbraid — to separate (anything braided, as hair) into the several strands.
  • unbrake — to stop braking; to release the brake(s)
  • unbroke — unbroken.
  • unbuild — to demolish (something built); raze.
  • unbuilt — not yet built (on)
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