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6-letter words containing c

  • backet — a shallow box, typically one used for carrying substances such as ashes, coal or salt
  • backie — a ride on the back of someone's bicycle
  • backra — a White person
  • backup — Backup consists of extra equipment, resources, or people that you can get help or support from if necessary.
  • bacons — Plural form of bacon.
  • bactra — an ancient country in W Asia, between the Oxus River and the Hindu Kush Mountains. Capital: Bactra.
  • baicai — Alternative spelling of bok choy.
  • balche — (among the Yucatec Maya) a drink made from the bark of a leguminous tree, Lonchocarpus violaceus, which is soaked in honey and water and fermented.
  • balcon — Sir Michael. 1896–1977, British film producer; his films made at Ealing Studios include the comedies Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949) and The Lavender Hill Mob (1951)
  • baltic — denoting or relating to the Baltic Sea or the Baltic States
  • baluch — Baluchi.
  • balzac — Honoré de (ɔnɔre də). 1799–1850, French novelist: author of a collection of novels under the general title La Comédie humaine, including Eugénie Grandet (1833), Le Père Goriot (1834), and La Cousine Bette (1846)
  • barcan — an ancient Carthaginian family to which Hamilcar, Hasdrubal, and Hannibal belonged.
  • bardic — (formerly) a person who composed and recited epic or heroic poems, often while playing the harp, lyre, or the like.
  • barsac — a sweet French white wine produced around the town of Barsac in the Gironde
  • baruch — a disciple of Jeremiah (Jeremiah 32–36)
  • basics — The basics of something are its simplest, most important elements, ideas, or principles, in contrast to more complicated or detailed ones.
  • basuco — a highly addictive drug consisting of low-grade cocaine mixed with coca paste and other substances, often cannabis
  • bauchi — a state of N Nigeria; tin mining. Capital: Bauchi. Pop: 4 676 465 (2006). Area: 45 837 sq km (17 698 sq miles)
  • baucis — a poor peasant woman who, with her husband Philemon, was rewarded for hospitality to the disguised gods Zeus and Hermes
  • bcc'ed — to send (a duplicate of a document, email, or the like) to (someone whose name is not visible to the primary addressee).
  • be inc — (company)   The company that produced the BeBox, founded by Jean-Louis Gassee, former product chief at Apple.
  • beachy — covered with gentle sandy slopes
  • beacon — A beacon is a light or a fire, usually on a hill or tower, which acts as a signal or a warning.
  • becall — to use insulting words about someone
  • becalm — to calm down
  • became — Became is the past tense of become.
  • becard — any of several passerine birds of the genus Pachyramphus, of the American tropics, having large heads and swollen bills, and variously classified with the flycatchers or the cotingas.
  • bechar — a city in NW Algeria: an oasis. Pop: 149 000 (2005 est)
  • bechet — Sidney (Joseph). 1897–1959, US jazz soprano saxophonist and clarinettist
  • becked — Simple past tense and past participle of beck.
  • becker — Boris (ˈbɒrɪs). born 1967, German tennis player: Wimbledon champion 1985, 1986, and 1989: the youngest man ever to win Wimbledon
  • becket — a clevis forming part of one end of a sheave, used for securing standing lines by means of a thimble
  • beckon — If you beckon to someone, you signal to them to come to you.
  • beclog — to clog (something) up, to block thoroughly
  • become — If someone or something becomes a particular thing, they start to change and develop into that thing, or start to develop the characteristics mentioned.
  • becurl — to cover with curls
  • bedeck — If flags or other ornaments bedeck a place, a lot of them have been hung up to decorate it.
  • beduck — to duck under water
  • beechy — Of or relating to beech trees.
  • belace — to decorate with lace
  • belgic — of Belgium
  • belloc — Hilaire (ˈhɪlɛə, hɪˈlɛə). 1870–1953, British poet, essayist, and historian, born in France, noted particularly for his verse for children in The Bad Child's Book of Beasts (1896) and Cautionary Tales (1907)
  • bemock — to mock
  • benchy — (of a hillside) hollowed out in benches
  • bercow — John (Simon). born 1963, British Conservative politician; speaker of the House of Commons from 2009
  • betcha — I bet you
  • bewick — Thomas. 1753–1828, English wood engraver; his best-known works are Chillingham Bull (1789), a large woodcut, Aesop's Fables (1818), and his History of British Birds (1797–1804)
  • beylic — a province ruled over by a bey
  • bianca — a female given name: from an Italian word meaning “white.”.
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