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8-letter words containing g, a, b

  • bogeyman — A bogeyman is someone whose ideas or actions are disapproved of by some people, and who is described by them as evil or unpleasant in order to make other people afraid.
  • bondager — someone who performs bondservice; a bondman
  • bondages — slavery or involuntary servitude; serfdom.
  • bongrace — a brim or shade on the front of women's bonnets or hats, intended to protect the face from the sun
  • boogaloo — a type of dance performed to rock and roll music
  • book bag — a bag or satchel used especially by a student for carrying books.
  • boongary — a tree kangaroo, Dendrolagus lumholtzi, of northeastern Queensland
  • bostangi — a Turkish imperial guard
  • bowgrace — a fender or pad used to protect the bows of a vessel from ice.
  • bowyangs — a pair of strings or straps secured round each trouser leg below the knee, worn esp by sheep-shearers and other labourers
  • braggart — a person who boasts loudly or exaggeratedly; bragger
  • braggers — a person who brags.
  • braiding — braids collectively
  • brailing — Nautical. any of several horizontal lines fastened to the edge of a fore-and-aft sail or lateen sail, for gathering in the sail.
  • brainfag — prolonged mental fatigue.
  • braining — Anatomy, Zoology. the part of the central nervous system enclosed in the cranium of humans and other vertebrates, consisting of a soft, convoluted mass of gray and white matter and serving to control and coordinate the mental and physical actions.
  • brakeage — the braking power of a vehicle, esp a train
  • branding — The branding of a product is the presentation of it to the public in a way that makes it easy for people to recognize or identify.
  • branking — to hold up and toss the head, as a horse when spurning the bit or prancing.
  • branting — Karl Hjalmar (jalmar). 1860–1925, Swedish politician; prime minister (1920; 1921–23; 1924–25). He founded Sweden's welfare state and shared the Nobel peace prize 1921
  • brassage — a fee charged for coining money
  • bratling — a small badly-behaved child
  • brawling — a noisy quarrel, squabble, or fight.
  • 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.
  • bretagne — Brittany2
  • bridgman — Percy Williams. 1882–1961, US physicist: Nobel prize for physics (1946) for his work on high-pressure physics and thermodynamics
  • brigaded — a military unit having its own headquarters and consisting of two or more regiments, squadrons, groups, or battalions.
  • brigalow — any of various acacia trees
  • brigands — a bandit, especially one of a band of robbers in mountain or forest regions.
  • brigsail — a large gaffsail on the mainmast or trysail mast of a brig.
  • brockage — a defect or fault imposed on a coin during its minting.
  • brougham — a four-wheeled horse-drawn closed carriage having a raised open driver's seat in front
  • brugmann — (Friedrich) Karl [free-drik kahrl;; German free-drikh kahrl] /ˈfri drɪk kɑrl;; German ˈfri drɪx kɑrl/ (Show IPA), 1849–1919, German philologist.
  • bugzilla — (programming)   The web-based bug tracking system used by the Mozilla project.
  • bulgakov — Mikhail Afanaseyev (ʌfʌˈnasjef). 1891–1940, Soviet novelist, dramatist, and short-story writer; his novels include The Master and Margerita (1966–67)
  • bulganin — Nikolai Aleksandrovich (nikaˈlaj alɪkˈsandrəvitʃ). 1895–1975, Soviet statesman and military leader; chairman of the council of ministers (1955–58)
  • bulgaria — a republic in SE Europe, on the Balkan Peninsula on the Black Sea: under Turkish rule from 1395 until 1878; became an independent kingdom in 1908 and a republic in 1946; joined the EU in 2007; consists chiefly of the Danube valley in the north and the Balkan Mountains in the central part, separated from the Rhodope Mountains of the south by the valley of the Maritsa River. Language: Bulgarian. Religion: Christian (Bulgarian Orthodox) majority. Currency: lev. Capital: Sofia. Pop: 6 981 642 (2013 est). Area: 110 911 sq km (42 823 sq miles)
  • bullyrag — to bully, esp by means of cruel practical jokes
  • bungalow — A bungalow is a house which has only one level, and no stairs.
  • bungwall — an Australian fern, Blechnum indicum, having an edible rhizome
  • burglary — If someone commits a burglary, they enter a building by force and steal things. Burglary is the act of doing this.
  • burgrave — the military governor of a German town or castle, esp in the 12th and 13th centuries
  • burn bag — a special bag into which discarded secret or sensitive documents are placed for burning.
  • bushgoat — a S African antelope
  • cabbaged — Chiefly British. cloth scraps that remain after a garment has been cut from a fabric and that by custom the tailor may claim. Also called cab. such scraps used for reprocessing.
  • cabbages — Plural form of cabbage.
  • cabbagey — resembling a cabbage
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