6-letter words containing g, e, b
- bugeye — a ketch-rigged sailing vessel used on Chesapeake Bay.
- bugged — Also called true bug, hemipteran, hemipteron. a hemipterous insect.
- bugger — Some people use bugger to describe a person who has done something annoying or stupid.
- bugler — A bugler is someone who plays the bugle.
- buglet — a small bugle
- bulged — a rounded projection, bend, or protruding part; protuberance; hump: a bulge in a wall.
- bulger — a thing which bulges
- bunged — a stopper for the opening of a cask.
- bungee — a type of stretchy rope consisting of elastic strands often in a fabric casing
- bunger — a firework
- bungle — If you bungle something, you fail to do it properly, because you make mistakes or are clumsy.
- burgee — a triangular or swallow-tailed flag flown from the mast of a merchant ship for identification and from the mast of a yacht to indicate its owner's membership of a particular yacht club
- burger — A burger is a flat round mass of minced meat or vegetables, which is fried and often eaten in a bread roll.
- burgle — If a building is burgled, a thief enters it by force and steals things.
- bygone — Bygone means happening or existing a very long time ago.
- cubage — cubic content or volume
- debugs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of debug.
- ebbing — the flowing back of the tide as the water returns to the sea (opposed to flood, flow).
- edberg — Stefan. born 1966, Swedish tennis player; winner of six Grand Slam singles titles: Wimbledon (1988, 1990), the US Open (1991–2), and the Australian Open (1985, 1987)
- egbert — a.d. 775?–839, king of the West Saxons 802–839; 1st king of the English 828–839.
- elbing — a port in N Poland: metallurgical industries. Pop: 129 000 (2005 est)
- elbląg — a port in N Poland: metallurgical industries. Pop: 129 000 (2005 est)
- engobe — a liquid put on pottery before glazing
- g-bell — bell
- gabbed — Simple past tense and past participle of gab.
- gabber — to talk or chat idly; chatter.
- gabble — to speak or converse rapidly and unintelligibly; jabber.
- gabels — Plural form of gabel.
- gabies — a fool.
- gabled — provided with a gable or gables: a gabled house.
- gables — Plural form of gable.
- gablet — a small gable
- gambet — Any bird of the genus Totanus; a tattler.
- gamble — to play at any game of chance for money or other stakes.
- garbed — a fashion or mode of dress, especially of a distinctive, uniform kind: in the garb of a monk.
- garble — to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: to garble instructions.
- gazebo — a structure, as an open or latticework pavilion or summerhouse, built on a site that provides an attractive view.
- geebag — a disagreeable woman
- gelber — Jack, 1932–2003, U.S. playwright.
- gerbil — any of numerous small burrowing rodents of the genus Gerbillus and related genera, of Asia, Africa, and southern Russia, having long hind legs used for jumping.
- gerboa — Alternative form of jerboa.
- get by — to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension.
- gheber — Gabar.
- gibbed — (of a cat) castrated.
- gibber — to speak inarticulately or meaninglessly.
- gibbet — a gallows with a projecting arm at the top, from which the bodies of criminals were formerly hung in chains and left suspended after execution.
- gibeon — a town in ancient Palestine, NW of Jerusalem. Josh. 9:3.
- giblet — (usually plural) the edible viscera of a bird.
- gimbel — Jacob, 1850–1922, U.S. retail merchant.
- gimble — To grimace.