8-letter words containing e, b, r, d
- crumbled — Simple past tense and past participle of crumble.
- cumbered — Simple past tense and past participle of cumber.
- curbside — at the curb or on the sidewalk adjacent to the street
- d'albert — Eugen [German oi-geyn] /German ɔɪˈgeɪn/ (Show IPA), or Eugène [French œ-zhen] /French œˈʒɛn/ (Show IPA), Francis Charles, 1864–1932, German-French pianist and composer, born in Scotland.
- dabblers — Plural form of dabbler.
- dabsters — Plural form of dabster.
- dagobert — a Merovingian King of the Franks, who lived c.603-639, and made Paris his capital
- darbyite — a member of the Plymouth Brethren.
- dark web — the portion of the Internet that is intentionally hidden from search engines, uses masked IP addresses, and is accessible only with a special web browser: part of the deep web.
- daybreak — Daybreak is the time in the morning when light first appears.
- de-orbit — the act of leaving orbit
- deadborn — (dated, rare) Stillborn.
- dearborn — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit: automobile industry. Pop: 96 670 (2003 est)
- debarked — Simple past tense and past participle of debark.
- debarker — a machine that strips bark from logs
- debarred — to shut out or exclude from a place or condition: to debar all those who are not members.
- debaters — Plural form of debater.
- debeaker — to remove the upper beak from (a bird) to prevent egg eating or attacks on other birds.
- debitors — a debtor.
- debonair — A man who is debonair is confident, charming, and well-dressed.
- debrecen — a city in E Hungary: seat of the revolutionary government of 1849. Pop: 205 881 (2003 est)
- debriefs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of debrief.
- debrises — the remains of anything broken down or destroyed; ruins; rubble: the debris of buildings after an air raid.
- debruise — to overlay or partly cover with an ordinary
- debugger — a program that is used to find and correct bugs in other programs
- debunker — to expose or excoriate (a claim, assertion, sentiment, etc.) as being pretentious, false, or exaggerated: to debunk advertising slogans.
- deburred — to remove burrs from (a piece of machined work); burr.
- december — December is the twelfth and last month of the year in the Western calendar.
- delbruck — Max. 1906–81, US molecular biologist, born in Germany. Noted for his work on bacteriophages, he shared the Nobel prize for physiology or medicine in 1969
- delubrum — a shrine or sanctuary
- describe — If you describe a person, object, event, or situation, you say what they are like or what happened.
- deverbal — (of a noun or adjective) derived from a verb.
- dewberry — any trailing bramble, such as Rubus hispidus of North America and R. caesius of Europe and NW Asia, having blue-black fruits
- dewsbury — a town in N England, in Kirklees unitary authority, West Yorkshire: formerly a centre of the woollen industry. Pop: 54 341 (2001)
- diablery — Sorcery.
- diarbekr — Diyarbakir.
- diatribe — A diatribe is an angry speech or article which is extremely critical of someone's ideas or activities.
- diborane — a colorless gas with an unpleasant odor, B 2 H 6 , used in the synthesis of organic boron compounds as a dope to introduce boron and as a polymerization catalyst for ethylene.
- dirtbike — An off-road motorcycle.
- disabler — to make unable or unfit; weaken or destroy the capability of; incapacitate: The detective successfully disabled the bomb. He was disabled by the accident.
- disburse — to pay out (money), especially for expenses; expend.
- disorbed — thrown out of orbit
- disrobed — Simple past tense and past participle of disrobe.
- disrobes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disrobe.
- doberman — Doberman pinscher.
- dogberry — the berry or fruit of any of various plants, as the European dogwood, Cornus sanguinea, the chokeberry, Aronia arbutifolia, or the mountain ash, Sorbus americana.
- doorbell — a bell chime, or the like, at a door or connected with a door, rung by persons outside wanting someone inside to open the door.
- doublers — Plural form of doubler.
- doublure — an ornamental lining of a book cover.
- doubters — Plural form of doubter.