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7-letter words containing d, u, b

  • -budget — -budget combines with adjectives such as 'low' and 'big' to form adjectives which indicate how much money is spent on something, especially the making of a film.
  • abandum — (legal) Anything forfeited or confiscated.
  • abduced — Simple past tense and past participle of abduce.
  • abducts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of abduct.
  • 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.
  • abjured — Simple past tense and past participle of abjure.
  • abluted — washed thoroughly
  • abounds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of abound.
  • abutted — to be adjacent; touch or join at the edge or border (often followed by on, upon, or against): This piece of land abuts on a street.
  • aubades — Plural form of aubade.
  • audible — A sound that is audible is loud enough to be heard.
  • audibly — capable of being heard; loud enough to be heard; actually heard.
  • audubon — John James. 1785–1851, US naturalist and artist, noted particularly for his paintings of birds in Birds of America (1827–38)
  • babudom — the rule of babus
  • bad guy — A bad guy is a person in a story or film who is considered to be evil or wicked, or who is fighting on the wrong side. You can also refer to the bad guys in a situation in real life.
  • badious — chestnut coloured; brownish-red
  • bahadur — a title formerly conferred by the British on distinguished Indians
  • bandeau — a narrow band of ribbon, velvet, etc, worn round the head
  • bandung — a city in Indonesia, in SW Java. Pop: 2 136 260 (2000)
  • 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.
  • baulked — to stop, as at an obstacle, and refuse to proceed or to do something specified (usually followed by at): He balked at making the speech.
  • bausond — (of animals) dappled with white spots on a black or bay background; esp having a white patch on the face
  • becloud — to cover or obscure with a cloud
  • bedaubs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bedaub.
  • bedbugs — Plural form of bedbug.
  • bedouin — A Bedouin is a member of a particular Arab tribe.
  • bedunce — to cause to look or feel foolish
  • bemused — If you are bemused, you are puzzled or confused.
  • bermuda — a UK Overseas Territory consisting of a group of over 150 coral islands (the Bermudas) in the NW Atlantic: discovered in about 1503, colonized by the British by 1612, although not acquired by the British crown until 1684. Capital: Hamilton. Pop: 69 467 (2013 est). Area: 53 sq km (20 sq miles)
  • bidault — Georges (ʒɔːrʒ). 1899–1983, French statesman; prime minister (1946, 1949–50). His opposition to Algerian independence led him to support the OAS: he was charged with treason (1963) and fled abroad
  • bifidus — a genus of anaerobic bacteria, many of which are present natively in the human digestive system
  • big bud — a serious disease of plants, esp of blackcurrants, in which the buds swell up as a result of attack by the gall mite Cecidophyopsis ribis
  • bitumed — covered with bitumen
  • bludger — a person who scrounges
  • blunden — Edmund (Charles). 1896–1974, British poet and scholar, noted esp for Undertones of War (1928), a memoir of World War I in verse and prose
  • blunder — A blunder is a stupid or careless mistake.
  • blunted — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • blurred — to obscure or sully (something) by smearing or with a smeary substance: The windows were blurred with soot.
  • blurted — to utter suddenly or inadvertently; divulge impulsively or unadvisedly (usually followed by out): He blurted out the hiding place of the spy.
  • bodeful — portentous, foreboding, ominous
  • bordure — the outer edge of a shield, esp when decorated distinctively
  • boudoir — A boudoir is a woman's bedroom or private sitting room.
  • boughed — having a bough or boughs (usually used in combination): golden-boughed elms.
  • boulder — A boulder is a large rounded rock.
  • bounded — (of a set) having a bound, esp where a measure is defined in terms of which all the elements of the set, or the differences between all pairs of members, are less than some value, or else all its members lie within some other well-defined set
  • bounden — morally obligatory (archaic except in the phrase bounden duty)
  • bounder — If you call a man a bounder, you mean he behaves in an unkind, deceitful, or selfish way.
  • bourder — a person who jests or jokes

On this page, we collect all 7-letter words with D-U-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-U-B to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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