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10-letter words containing e, b, i

  • breathe in — When you breathe in, you take some air into your lungs.
  • brecciated — Petrology. to form as breccia.
  • brian reid — (person)   The person who cofounded Usenet's anarchic alt.* newsgroup hierarchy with John Gilmore.
  • brickearth — a clayey alluvium suitable for the making of bricks: specifically, such a deposit in southern England, yielding a fertile soil
  • brickfield — an area of ground where bricks are made
  • bricklayer — A bricklayer is a person whose job is to build walls using bricks.
  • brickmaker — a person who makes bricks
  • bridalveil — a waterfall in Yosemite National Park, California. 620 feet (189 meters) high.
  • bridegroom — A bridegroom is a man who is getting married.
  • bridesmaid — A bridesmaid is a woman or a girl who helps and accompanies a bride on her wedding day.
  • bridezilla — a woman whose behaviour in planning the details of her wedding is regarded as intolerable
  • bridgeable — a structure spanning and providing passage over a river, chasm, road, or the like.
  • bridgehead — A bridgehead is a good position which an army has taken in the enemy's territory and from which it can advance or attack.
  • bridgeport — a port in SW Connecticut, on Long Island Sound. Pop: 139 664 (2003 est)
  • bridgetalk — (language)   A visual language.
  • bridgetown — the capital of Barbados, a port on the SW coast. Pop: 144 000 (2005 est)
  • bridgetree — a beam supporting the shaft on which an upper millstone rotates.
  • bridgewall — (in a furnace or boiler) a transverse baffle that serves to deflect products of combustion.
  • bridgework — a partial denture attached to the surrounding teeth
  • bridgwater — a town in SW England, in central Somerset. Pop: 36 563 (2001)
  • bridlewise — (of a horse) obedient to the pressure of the reins on the neck rather than to the bit
  • brier rose — any of various thorny shrubs or other plants, such as the sweetbrier and greenbrier
  • brig. gen. — Brig. Gen. is a written abbreviation for brigadier general.
  • brigandage — plundering by brigands
  • brigandine — a coat of mail, invented in the Middle Ages to increase mobility, consisting of metal rings or sheets sewn on to cloth or leather
  • brigantine — a two-masted sailing ship, rigged square on the foremast and fore-and-aft with square topsails on the mainmast
  • brightener — a person or thing that brightens.
  • brightline — (of rules, standards, etc.) unambiguously clear: This muddies the waters of what should be a brightline rule.
  • brightness — the condition of being bright
  • brightsome — bright or luminous
  • brilliance — great brightness; radiance
  • brilliante — with spirit; lively
  • brinelling — a localized surface corrosion; a cause of damage to bearings
  • bring home — introduce to parents
  • bring over — to cause (a person) to change allegiances
  • brise-bise — a short curtain, often of lace, hung on the lower section of a window.
  • brix scale — a scale for calibrating hydrometers used for measuring the concentration and density of sugar solutions at a given temperature
  • broadpiece — an English coin replaced by the guinea in 1663
  • brockville — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada.
  • broken ice — sea ice that covers from 50 to 80 percent of the surface of water in any particular area.
  • brokership — an agent who buys or sells for a principal on a commission basis without having title to the property.
  • bronchiole — any of the smallest bronchial tubes, usually ending in alveoli
  • broodiness — moody; gloomy.
  • brookfield — a city in SE Wisconsin, near Milwaukee.
  • broomfield — a city in N central Colorado.
  • brown rice — unpolished rice, in which the grains retain the outer yellowish-brown layer (bran)
  • brownfield — Brownfield land is land in a town or city where houses or factories have been built in the past, but which is not being used at the present time.
  • brunetiere — Ferdinand [fer-dee-nahn] /fɛr diˈnɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1849–1906, French literary critic.
  • brunfelsia — any of various shrubs or small trees belonging to the genus Brunfelsia, of the nightshade family, native to tropical America, having white or purple tubular or bell-shaped flowers.
  • brunnhilde — the heroine of Wagner's Ring of the Nibelungs. Compare Siegfried.
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