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7-letter words containing d, a, b

  • bravado — Bravado is an appearance of courage or confidence that someone shows in order to impress other people.
  • breaded — coated with breadcrumbs
  • breadth — The breadth of something is the distance between its two sides.
  • breamed — to clean (a ship's bottom) by applying burning furze, reeds, etc., to soften the pitch and loosen adherent matter.
  • brigade — A brigade is one of the groups which an army is divided into.
  • brigand — A brigand is someone who attacks people and robs them, especially in mountains or forests.
  • broad a — of or relating to a type of pronunciation transcription in which symbols correspond approximately to phonemes without taking account of allophonic variations
  • broadax — an ax with a broad blade, used as a weapon or for hewing timber
  • broaden — When something broadens, it becomes wider.
  • broader — of great breadth: The river was too broad to swim across.
  • broadly — You can use broadly to indicate that something is generally true.
  • broadus — something given as a bonus; lagniappe.
  • brocade — Brocade is a thick, expensive material, often made of silk, with a raised pattern on it.
  • brocard — an elementary legal principle, often expressed in Latin
  • bucardo — a recently extinct Spanish mountain goat
  • buganda — a region of Uganda: a powerful Bantu kingdom from the 17th century
  • burdash — a fringed sash worn over a coat
  • busload — A busload of people is a large number of passengers on a bus.
  • bustard — any terrestrial bird of the family Otididae, inhabiting open regions of the Old World: order Gruiformes (cranes, rails, etc). They have long strong legs, a heavy body, a long neck, and speckled plumage
  • buzzard — A buzzard is a large bird of prey.
  • by hand — If you do something by hand, you do it using your hands rather than a machine.
  • by-road — a side road.
  • byrlady — a mild oath
  • cabildo — a municipal council, or a town hall, in Latin America
  • cabinda — an exclave of Angola, separated from the rest of the country by part of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Pop: about 300 000 (2002 est). Area: 7270 sq km (2807 sq miles)
  • cabined — a small house or cottage, usually of simple design and construction: He was born in a cabin built of rough logs.
  • cadbury — George. 1839–1922, British Quaker industrialist and philanthropist. He established, with his brother Richard Cadbury (1835–99), the chocolate-making company Cadbury Brothers and the garden village Bournville, near Birmingham, for their workers
  • car bed — a small, legless, basketlike portable bed for an infant, especially for use in a car.
  • carabid — any typically dark-coloured beetle of the family Carabidae, including the bombardier and other ground beetles
  • carbide — a binary compound of carbon with a more electropositive element
  • cardbus — (hardware)   The 32-bit version of the PCMCIA (PC Card) bus.
  • catbird — any of several North American songbirds of the family Mimidae (mockingbirds), esp Dumetella carolinensis, whose call resembles the mewing of a cat
  • chobdar — a macebearer or attendant of a king or eminent dignitary in India
  • codable — capable of being coded
  • cordoba — standard monetary unit of Nicaragua
  • crabbed — surly; irritable; perverse
  • cudbear — a purple dye prepared from lichens
  • dabbers — Plural form of dabber.
  • dabbing — a quick or light blow; a pat, as with the hand or something soft.
  • dabbity — a temporary tattoo
  • dabbled — to play and splash in or as if in water, especially with the hands.
  • dabbler — to play and splash in or as if in water, especially with the hands.
  • dabbles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dabble.
  • daboias — Plural form of daboia.
  • dabster — an incompetent or amateurish worker; bungler
  • dad bod — an untoned and slightly plump male physique, esp one considered attractive
  • dagobas — Plural form of dagoba.
  • dambrod — a draughtboard
  • danbury — city in SW Conn., near Bridgeport: pop. 75,000
  • darbies — handcuffs
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