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7-letter words containing g, r, b, i

  • burring — a pronunciation of the r- sound as a uvular trill, as in certain Northern English dialects.
  • busgirl — a waiter's assistant
  • byrgius — a crater in the third quadrant of the face of the moon: about 40 miles (64 km) in diameter.
  • curbing — material for a curb
  • dirtbag — Slang. a filthy or contemptible person.
  • fibiger — Johannes Andreas Grib [yoh-hah-nis ahn-dre-ahs greeb] /yoʊˈhɑ nɪs ɑnˈdrɛ ɑs grib/ (Show IPA), 1867–1928, Danish pathologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1926.
  • firbolg — any member of the pre-Celtic inhabitants of Ireland who were defeated by the Tuatha De Danann.
  • firebug — arsonist; incendiary; pyromaniac.
  • frogbit — an aquatic, floating plant, Hydrocharis morsus-ranae, of Eurasia, having thick, roundish, spongy leaves.
  • gabbier — Comparative form of gabby.
  • gabriel — one of the archangels, appearing usually as a divine messenger. Dan. 8:16, 9:21; Luke 1:19, 26.
  • gambier — an astringent extract obtained from the leaves and young shoots of a tropical Asian shrub, Uncaria gambir, of the madder family, used in medicine, dyeing, tanning, etc.
  • garboil — confusion.
  • gerbils — Plural form of gerbil.
  • gibberd — Sir Frederick. 1908–84, British architect and town planner. His buildings include the Liverpool Roman Catholic cathedral (1960–67) and the Regent's Park Mosque in London (1977). Harlow in the UK and Santa Teresa in Venezuela were built to his plans
  • gibbers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gibber.
  • gilbertCass, 1859–1934, U.S. architect.
  • glibber — Comparative form of glib.
  • gr brit — Great Britain
  • gribble — a small, marine isopod crustacean of the genus Limnoria that destroys submerged timber by boring into it.
  • grimsby — a seaport in Humberside county, in E England at the mouth of the Humber estuary.
  • gt brit — Great Britain
  • iceberg — a large floating mass of ice, detached from a glacier and carried out to sea.
  • inbring — to confiscate (the belongings of a condemned criminal), to seize by legal authority
  • kerbing — the material forming a curb, as along a street.
  • limburg — a medieval duchy in W Europe: now divided into a province in the SE Netherlands (Limburg) and a province in NE Belgium (Limbourg)
  • mr. big — a man having the highest authority, control, prestige, or influence in a group, field, situation, or the like, especially in the underworld.
  • obliger — to require or constrain, as by law, command, conscience, or force of necessity.
  • obligor — a person who is bound to another.
  • overbig — too big
  • pibgorn — an ancient wind instrument of Wales resembling the hornpipe.
  • probing — to search into or examine thoroughly; question closely: to probe one's conscience.
  • ribbing — one of a series of curved bones that are articulated with the vertebrae and occur in pairs, 12 in humans, on each side of the vertebrate body, certain pairs being connected with the sternum and forming the thoracic wall.
  • ribcage — the enclosure formed by the ribs and their connecting bones.
  • ringbit — (in horse racing) a piece of equipment worn by a horse which has a ring at the end that is passed through the horse's mouth
  • robbing — to take something from (someone) by unlawful force or threat of violence; steal from.
  • rubbing — an act or instance of rubbing: an alcohol rub.
  • sorbing — to gather on a surface either by absorption, adsorption, or a combination of the two processes.
  • subring — a subset of a ring that is a subgroup under addition and that is closed under multiplication. Compare ring1 (def 22).
  • tilburg — a city in the S Netherlands.
  • upbring — to rear or raise (a child); bring up
  • verbing — the act or practice of using a noun as a verb, such as 'medal' to mean "to win a medal"
  • webring — a set of related websites that one can visit one after the other
  • zorbing — (originally New Zealand) A sport in which a participant is secured inside a zorb and rolled downhill.
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