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

  • binprolog — (language)   Probably the fastest freely available C-emulated Prolog. BinProlog features: logical and permanent global variables; backtrackable destructive assignment; circular term unification; extended DCGs (now built into the engine as "invisible grammars"); intuitionistic and linear implication based hypothetical reasoning; a Tcl/Tk interface. Version 3.30 runs on SPARC/Solaris 2.x, SunOS 4.x; DEC Alpha 64-bit version; DEC MIPS; SGI MIPS; 68k - NeXT, Sun-3; IBM RS6000; HP PA-RISC (two variants); Intel 80386, Intel 486/Linux, MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows 3.1 (with DOS-extender go32 v1.10). E-mail: Paul Tarau <[email protected]>.
  • binturong — an arboreal SE Asian viverrine mammal, Arctictis binturong, closely related to the palm civets but larger and having long shaggy black hair
  • bioenergy — the renewable energy derived from biological sources
  • biography — A biography of someone is an account of their life, written by someone else.
  • bioregion — a natural ecological community in which the biodiversity and ecosystem are distinct
  • bird cage — metal enclosure for a bird
  • bittering — having a harsh, disagreeably acrid taste, like that of aspirin, quinine, wormwood, or aloes.
  • bjoerling — Jussi [yoo s-ee] /ˈyʊs i/ (Show IPA), 1911–60, Swedish tenor.
  • bordering — the part or edge of a surface or area that forms its outer boundary.
  • boresight — to verify the alignment of the sights and bore of (a firearm).
  • borgesian — of Jorge Luis Borges or his works
  • borrowing — Borrowing is the activity of borrowing money.
  • bothering — to give trouble to; annoy; pester; worry: His baby sister bothered him for candy.
  • bourgeois — If you describe people, their way of life, or their attitudes as bourgeois, you disapprove of them because you consider them typical of conventional middle-class people.
  • bourguiba — Habib ben Ali (hæˈbɪb bɛn ˈɑːlɪ). 1903–2000, Tunisian statesman: president of Tunisia (1957–87); a moderate and an advocate of gradual social change. He was deposed in a coup and kept under house arrest for the rest of his life
  • bowstring — the string of an archer's bow, usually consisting of three strands of hemp
  • brabbling — to argue stubbornly about trifles; wrangle.
  • bracingly — strengthening; invigorating: This mountain air is bracing.
  • brambling — a Eurasian finch, Fringilla montifringilla, with a speckled head and back and, in the male, a reddish brown breast and darker wings and tail
  • branching — the occurrence of several decay paths (branches) in the disintegration of a particular nuclide or the de-excitation of an excited atom. The branching fraction (nuclear) or branching ratio (atomic) is the proportion of the disintegrating nuclei that follow a particular branch to the total number of disintegrating nuclides
  • brandling — a small red earthworm, Eisenia foetida (or Helodrilus foetidus), found in manure and used as bait by anglers
  • brannigan — a noisy quarrel
  • breaching — the act or a result of breaking; break or rupture.
  • breasting — Anatomy, Zoology. (in bipeds) the outer, front part of the thorax, or the front part of the body from the neck to the abdomen; chest.
  • breathing — the passage of air into and out of the lungs to supply the body with oxygen
  • breeching — the strap of a harness that passes behind a horse's haunches
  • bregmatic — of or relating to the bregma
  • bricolage — the jumbled effect produced by the close proximity of buildings from different periods and in different architectural styles
  • bridgeman — a person who works on a bridge or on the construction of bridges.
  • bridgeton — a city in SW New Jersey.
  • brigadier — A brigadier is a senior officer who is in charge of a brigade in the British armed forces.
  • brigading — a military unit having its own headquarters and consisting of two or more regiments, squadrons, groups, or battalions.
  • brighouse — a town in N England, in Calderdale unitary authority, West Yorkshire: machine tools, textiles, engineering. Pop: 32 360 (2001)
  • brightest — radiating or reflecting light; luminous; shining: The bright coins shone in the gloom.
  • brightish — fairly bright
  • bring off — If you bring off something difficult, you do it successfully.
  • bring out — When a person or company brings out a new product, especially a new book or CD, they produce it and put it on sale.
  • bringdown — a disappointment
  • bristling — Bristling means thick, hairy, and rough. It is used to describe things such as moustaches, beards, or eyebrows.
  • brittling — having hardness and rigidity but little tensile strength; breaking readily with a comparatively smooth fracture, as glass.
  • brokering — the work of a broker or brokerage
  • brookings — Robert Somers [suhm-erz] /ˈsʌm ərz/ (Show IPA), 1850–1932, U.S. merchant and philanthropist.
  • browridge — the ridge of bone over the eye sockets
  • brunching — a meal that serves as both breakfast and lunch.
  • buffering — temporary storage of data
  • bulgarian — Bulgarian means belonging or relating to Bulgaria, or to its people, language, or culture.
  • bull-ring — an arena for a bullfight.
  • bunkering — a large bin or receptacle; a fixed chest or box: a coal bunker.
  • burrowing — a hole or tunnel in the ground made by a rabbit, fox, or similar animal for habitation and refuge.
  • buttering — the fatty portion of milk, separating as a soft whitish or yellowish solid when milk or cream is agitated or churned.
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