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7-letter words containing d, a, r, b

  • -barred — having rigid usually straight lengths of metal, wood, etc
  • abelard — Peter. French name Pierre Abélard. 1079–1142, French scholastic philosopher and theologian whose works include Historia Calamitatum and Sic et Non (1121). His love for Héloïse is recorded in their correspondence
  • abermud — (games)   The first popular open source MUD. The first version of AberMUD, named after Aberystwyth, UK, was written in B by Alan Cox, Richard Acott, Jim Finnis, and Leon Thrane, at University of Wales, Aberystwyth for an old Honeywell mainframe and opened in 1987. The gameplay was heavily influenced by MUD1, written by Roy Trubshaw and Richard Bartle, which Alan Cox had played at the University of Essex. In late 1988, Alan Cox ported AberMUD to C so it could run under UNIX on Southampton University's Maths machines. This version was named AberMUD2. Various other versions followed.
  • abfarad — the cgs unit of capacitance in the electromagnetic system; the capacitance of a capacitor having a charge of 1 abcoulomb and a potential difference of 1 abvolt between its conductors: equivalent to 109 farads
  • abhored — Misspelling of abhorred.
  • abjured — Simple past tense and past participle of abjure.
  • aborded — Simple past tense and past participle of abord.
  • aborted — Carry out or undergo the abortion of (a fetus).
  • abraded — Simple past tense and past participle of abrade.
  • abrader — Something that abrades; a tool or machine for abrading. (First attested in the late 19th century.).
  • abrades — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of abrade.
  • abrased — Simple past tense and past participle of abrase.
  • abridge — to reduce the length of (a written work) by condensing or rewriting
  • adsorbs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of adsorb.
  • adverbs — any member of a class of words that function as modifiers of verbs or clauses, and in some languages, as Latin and English, as modifiers of adjectives, other adverbs, or adverbial phrases, as very in very nice, much in much more impressive, and tomorrow in She'll write to you tomorrow. They relate to what they modify by indicating place (I promise to be there), time (Do your homework now!), manner (She sings beautifully), circumstance (He accidentally dropped the glass when the bell rang), degree (I'm very happy to see you), or cause (I draw, although badly). See also sentence adverb.
  • air bed — an inflatable mattress
  • aldabra — an island group in the Indian Ocean: part of the British Indian Ocean Territory (1965–76); now administratively part of the Seychelles
  • ambered — fixed in amber
  • ambroid — amberoid
  • antbird — any of various dull-coloured South American passerine birds of the family Formicariidae, such as Hylophylax naevioides (spotted ant bird), that typically feed on ants
  • arbored — having an arbor, or bower
  • archbsd — (operating system)   4.4 BSD-Lite for the Acorn Archimedes.
  • ardabil — city in NW Iran, near the Caspian Sea: pop. 311,000
  • ardebil — a town in NW Iran, near the Caspian Sea.
  • armband — An armband is a band of fabric that you wear round your upper arm in order to show that you have an official position or belong to a particular group. Some people also wear a black armband to show that a friend or relation has died.
  • awlbird — the green woodpecker
  • axebird — a nightjar of northern Queensland and New Guinea with a cry that sounds like a chopping axe
  • b-grade — A B-grade person or thing is one that you consider to be inferior or of poor quality.
  • bacardi — a cocktail made with Bacardi rum, grenadine, and lime juice.
  • bad rap — bum rap.
  • badders — (UK, informal) badminton.
  • badgers — Plural form of badger.
  • bahadur — a title formerly conferred by the British on distinguished Indians
  • baldric — a wide silk sash or leather belt worn over the right shoulder to the left hip for carrying a sword, etc
  • ballard — J(ames) G(raham). 1930–2009, British novelist, born in China; his books include Crash (1973), The Unlimited Dream Company (1979), Empire of the Sun (1984), Cocaine Nights (1996), and Super-Cannes (2000)
  • bandari — a female monkey
  • banders — a thin, flat strip of some material for binding, confining, trimming, protecting, etc.: a band on each bunch of watercress.
  • bandora — A bass stringed instrument of the cittern family, having a long neck and a scallop-shaped body.
  • bandore — a 16th-century plucked musical instrument resembling a lute but larger and fitted with seven pairs of metal strings
  • bandrol — Alternative form of banderole.
  • bandura — a Ukrainian stringed instrument, resembling a lute
  • barbuda — a coral island in the E Caribbean, in the Leeward Islands: part of the independent state of Antigua and Barbuda. Area: 160 sq km (62 sq miles)
  • barbudo — beardfish.
  • barcode — a machine-readable arrangement of numbers and parallel lines of different widths printed on a package, which can be electronically scanned at a checkout to register the price of the goods and to activate computer stock-checking and reordering
  • bardash — a kept boy in a homosexual relationship; catamite
  • bardeen — John. 1908–91, US physicist and electrical engineer, noted for his research on electrical conduction in solids; shared Nobel prize for physics 1956 for research on semiconductors leading to the invention of the transistor; shared Nobel prize for physics 1972 for contributions to the theory of superconductivity
  • barding — Armor. any of various pieces of defensive armor for a horse.
  • barmaid — A barmaid is a woman who serves drinks behind a bar.
  • barnard — Christiaan (Neethling). 1923–2001, South African surgeon, who performed the first human heart transplant (1967)
  • bartend — to work as a bartender

On this page, we collect all 7-letter words with D-A-R-B. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 7-letter word that contains in D-A-R-B to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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