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6-letter words containing d, r

  • bodrag — an enemy attack or raid
  • bogard — to take an unfair share of (something); keep for oneself instead of sharing: Are you gonna bogart that joint all night?
  • bolder — not hesitating or fearful in the face of actual or possible danger or rebuff; courageous and daring: a bold hero.
  • bonder — a long stone or brick laid in a wall as a header
  • bordar — a smallholder of low social rank who held a cottage in return for menial work
  • bordel — a bordello
  • borden — ˈLizzie (Andrew) (ˈlɪzi ) ; lizˈē) 1860-1927; U.S. woman accused and acquitted in a sensational trial (1893) of murdering her father & stepmother (1892)
  • border — The border between two countries or regions is the dividing line between them. Sometimes the border also refers to the land close to this line.
  • bordet — Jules (Jean Baptiste Vincent) (ʒyl). 1870–1961, Belgian bacteriologist and immunologist, who discovered complement. Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1919
  • boride — a compound in which boron is the most electronegative element, esp a compound of boron and a metal
  • borked — to attack (a candidate or public figure) systematically, especially in the media.
  • boyard — Russian History. a member of the old nobility of Russia, before Peter the Great made rank dependent on state service.
  • braced — something that holds parts together or in place, as a clasp or clamp.
  • brady- — indicating slowness
  • braide — given to deceit
  • braids — to weave together strips or strands of; plait: to braid the hair.
  • braird — the first shoots of grass or crops
  • brando — Marlon. 1924–2004, US actor; his films include On the Waterfront (1954) and The Godfather (1972), for both of which he won Oscars, Last Tango in Paris (1972), Apocalypse Now (1979), A Dry White Season (1989), and Don Juan de Marco (1995)
  • brandt — Bill, full name William Brandt. 1905–83, British photographer. His photographic books include The English at Home (1936) and Perspectives of Nudes (1961)
  • brandy — Brandy is a strong alcoholic drink. It is often drunk after a meal.
  • braved — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
  • bready — having the appearance or texture of bread
  • bredie — a meat and vegetable stew
  • brenda — a feminine name
  • brewed — to make (beer, ale, etc.) by steeping, boiling, and fermenting malt and hops.
  • briand — Aristide (aristid). 1862–1932, French socialist statesman: prime minister of France 11 times. He was responsible for the separation of Church and State (1905) and he advocated a United States of Europe. Nobel peace prize 1926
  • briard — a medium-sized dog of an ancient French sheep-herding breed having a long rough coat of a single colour
  • bridal — Bridal is used to describe something that belongs or relates to a bride, or to both a bride and her bridegroom.
  • bridey — a female given name, form of Bridget.
  • bridge — A bridge is a structure that is built over a railway, river, or road so that people or vehicles can cross from one side to the other.
  • bridie — a semicircular pie containing meat and onions
  • bridle — A bridle is a set of straps that is put around a horse's head and mouth so that the person riding or driving the horse can control it.
  • brigid — Bridget2 (of Ireland)
  • broads — a group of shallow navigable lakes, connected by a network of rivers, in E England, in Norfolk and Suffolk
  • brodie — a suicidal or daredevil leap; wild dive: to do a brodie from a high ledge.
  • bronde — (of women's hair) artificially coloured to achieve a shade between blonde and brunette
  • broody — You say that someone is broody when they are thinking a lot about something in an unhappy way.
  • browed — having a brow of a specified kind (usually used in combination): a shaggy-browed brute.
  • bruted — to shape (a diamond) by rubbing with another diamond or a diamond chip.
  • budder — a plant which buds
  • budger — a person who budges or stirs
  • burden — If you describe a problem or a responsibility as a burden, you mean that it causes someone a lot of difficulty, worry, or hard work.
  • buried — to put in the ground and cover with earth: The pirates buried the chest on the island.
  • burked — to murder, as by suffocation, so as to leave no or few marks of violence.
  • burled — having burls that produce a distorted grain: burled lumber.
  • burned — having been cheated in a sale of drugs
  • burred — prickly or rough in texture.
  • byroad — a secondary or side road
  • byword — Someone or something that is a byword for a particular quality is well known for having that quality.
  • cadger — a person who cadges
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