0%

11-letter words containing g, r, b, i, t

  • outbreeding — to breed selected individuals outside the limits of the breed or variety.
  • overbetting — the activity or practice of betting more than the usual or permitted amount
  • pietersburg — capital of Northern Transvaal province, South Africa: pop. 26,000
  • registrable — a book in which records of acts, events, names, etc., are kept.
  • riding boot — a knee-high boot of black or brown leather, without fastenings, forming part of a riding habit.
  • right about — the position assumed by turning about to the right so as to face in the opposite direction.
  • right brace — (character)   "}". ASCII character 125. Common names: close brace; right brace; right squiggly; right squiggly bracket/brace; right curly bracket/brace; ITU-T: closing brace. Rare: unbrace; uncurly; rytit ("" = leftit); right squirrelly; {INTERCAL: bracelet ("" = embrace).

    Paired with {left brace

  • right brain — the right cerebral hemisphere of the human brain, which includes areas associated with abstraction, artistic ability, and emotional response
  • root bridge — (communications, hardware, networking)   A bridge which continuously transmits network topology information to other bridges, using the spanning tree protocol, in order to notify all other bridges on the network when topology changes are required. This means that a network is able to reconfigure itself whenever a network link (e.g. another bridge) fails, so an alternative path can be found. The presence of a root bridge also prevents loops from forming in the network. The root bridge is where the paths that frames take through the network they are assigned. It should be located centrally on the network to provide the shortest path to other links on the network. Unlike other bridges, the root bridge always forwards frames out over all of its ports. Every network should only have one root bridge. It should have the lowest bridge ID number.
  • rowing boat — rowboat.
  • rugby shirt — a knitted pullover sport shirt usually in bold horizontal stripes and having a white collar and neckline placket, styled after the shirts traditionally worn by the members of Rugby teams.
  • southbridge — a town in S Massachusetts.
  • spitsbergen — a group of islands in the Arctic Ocean, N of and belonging to Norway. 24,293 sq. mi. (62,920 sq. km).
  • spitzbergen — a group of islands in the Arctic Ocean, N of and belonging to Norway. 24,293 sq. mi. (62,920 sq. km).
  • spitzenburg — any of several red or yellow varieties of apple that ripen in the autumn.
  • spur blight — a disease of raspberries, characterized by reddish-brown spots on the stems, caused by a fungus, Didymella applanata.
  • stable girl — a girl or woman who looks after or attends horses in stables
  • stourbridge — an industrial town in W central England, in Dudley unitary authority, West Midlands. Pop: 55 480 (2001)
  • string band — a band consisting of stringed instruments
  • string bass — double bass.
  • string bean — any of various kinds of bean, as the green bean, the unripe pods of which are used as food, usually after stripping off the fibrous thread along the side.
  • stringboard — a board or facing covering the ends of the steps in a staircase.
  • subirrigate — to irrigate beneath the surface of the ground, as with water passing through a system of underground porous pipes or transmitted through the subsoil from ditches, etc.
  • subrogation — to put into the place of another; substitute for another.
  • superbright — exceptionally bright
  • toghril beg — ?990–1063 ad, Sultan of Turkey (1055–63), who founded the Seljuq dynasty and conquered Baghdad (1055)
  • toll bridge — a bridge at which a toll is charged.
  • tribologist — a student of, or expert in, tribology
  • troglobiont — any creature having a cave-dwelling mode of life.
  • unbreathing — not breathing; holding the breath
  • unrightable — in accordance with what is good, proper, or just: right conduct.
  • untrembling — not trembling or shaking
  • verbigerate — to talk or chat
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?