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8-letter words containing e, r, g

  • berrigan — an Australian tree, Pittosporum phylliraeoides, with hanging branches
  • berthage — a place for mooring boats
  • berthing — a shelflike sleeping space, as on a ship, airplane, or railroad car.
  • besieger — to lay siege to.
  • beverage — Beverages are drinks.
  • bewaring — to be wary, cautious, or careful of (usually used imperatively): Beware such inconsistency. Beware his waspish wit.
  • big tree — a giant Californian coniferous tree, Sequoiadendron giganteum, with a wide tapering trunk and thick spongy bark: family Taxodiaceae. It often reaches a height of 90 metres
  • bigarade — a Seville orange
  • bigender — Also, bigendered. noting or relating to a person who has two gender identities or some combination of both.
  • birdcage — A birdcage is a cage in which birds are kept.
  • blagueur — a person who engages in blague
  • blighter — You can refer to someone you do not like as a blighter.
  • blumberg — Baruch Samuel.1925–2011, US physician, noted for work on antigens: shared the Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1976
  • bogarted — to take an unfair share of (something); keep for oneself instead of sharing: Are you gonna bogart that joint all night?
  • bondager — someone who performs bondservice; a bondman
  • bongrace — a brim or shade on the front of women's bonnets or hats, intended to protect the face from the sun
  • borghese — a noble Italian family whose members were influential in Italian art and politics from the 16th to the 19th century
  • bourgeon — burgeon
  • bowgrace — a fender or pad used to protect the bows of a vessel from ice.
  • braggers — a person who brags.
  • brakeage — the braking power of a vehicle, esp a train
  • brassage — a fee charged for coining money
  • breading — a kind of food made of flour or meal that has been mixed with milk or water, made into a dough or batter, with or without yeast or other leavening agent, and baked.
  • breakage — Breakage is the act of breaking something.
  • breaking — (in Old English, Old Norse, etc) the change of a vowel into a diphthong
  • breaming — to clean (a ship's bottom) by applying burning furze, reeds, etc., to soften the pitch and loosen adherent matter.
  • breeding — If someone says that a person has breeding, they mean that they think the person is from a good social background and has good manners.
  • breezing — a wind or current of air, especially a light or moderate one.
  • bren gun — an air-cooled gas-operated light machine gun taking .303 calibre ammunition: used by British and Commonwealth forces in World War II
  • bretagne — Brittany2
  • breughel — Jan Bruegel
  • bridgend — a county borough in S Wales, created in 1996 from S Mid Glamorgan. Administrative centre: Bridgend. Pop: 129 900 (2003 est). Area: 264 sq km (102 sq miles)
  • briefing — A briefing is a meeting at which information or instructions are given to people, especially before they do something.
  • brigaded — a military unit having its own headquarters and consisting of two or more regiments, squadrons, groups, or battalions.
  • brighten — If someone brightens or their face brightens, they suddenly look happier.
  • brighter — radiating or reflecting light; luminous; shining: The bright coins shone in the gloom.
  • brigitte — a female given name, French form of Bridget.
  • brockage — a defect or fault imposed on a coin during its minting.
  • broguery — the use of a brogue or accent
  • bromberg — German name of Bydgoszcz.
  • brueghel — Jan (jɑn). 1568–1625, Flemish painter, noted for his detailed still lifes and landscapes
  • budgeree — excellent; fine
  • budgerow — a large slow-moving barge formerly used on the Ganges
  • budgeter — a person who budgets
  • buggered — If someone says that they will be buggered if they will do something, they mean that they do not want to do it and they will definitely not do it.
  • burbidge — (Eleanor) Margaret (Peachey) [pee-chee] /ˈpi tʃi/ (Show IPA), born 1919, U.S. astronomer, born in England.
  • burghley — William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley. 1520–98, English statesman: chief adviser to Elizabeth I; secretary of state (1558–72) and Lord High Treasurer (1572–98)
  • burgonet — a light 16th-century helmet, usually made of steel, with hinged cheekpieces
  • burgoyne — John. 1722–92, British general in the War of American Independence who was forced to surrender at Saratoga (1777)
  • burgrave — the military governor of a German town or castle, esp in the 12th and 13th centuries
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