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9-letter words containing i, b, e, r, s

  • revisable — to amend or alter: to revise one's opinion.
  • revisible — to amend or alter: to revise one's opinion.
  • rheobasic — of or relating to rheobase
  • rib steak — club steak.
  • rinseable — able to be rinsed
  • rubbishes — worthless, unwanted material that is rejected or thrown out; debris; litter; trash.
  • rubensian — Peter Paul [pee-ter pawl;; Flemish pey-tuh r poul] /ˈpi tər pɔl;; Flemish ˈpeɪ tər paʊl/ (Show IPA), 1577–1640, Flemish painter.
  • sabrelike — resembling a sabre
  • sabrewing — a large hummingbird of the genus Campylopterous, with long curved wings
  • sawtimber — trees suitable for sawing into planks, boards, etc.
  • scribable — able to be written or written on
  • scribbler — a machine for scribbling wool fibers.
  • sea robin — any of various gurnards, especially certain American species of the genus Prionotus, having large pectoral fins used to move across the ocean bottom.
  • semibreve — a note half the length of a breve; whole note.
  • semiurban — of, relating to, or designating a city or town.
  • serbonian — of, relating to, or designating the large marshy tract of land in the northern part of ancient Egypt in which entire armies are said to have been swallowed up.
  • shillaber — a shill or someone who poses as a satisfied customer in order to encourage other buyers or participants
  • shipborne — carried on a ship.
  • shorebird — a bird that frequents seashores, estuaries, etc., as the snipe, sandpiper, plover, and turnstone; a limicoline bird.
  • sideboard — a piece of furniture, as in a dining room, often with shelves, drawers, etc., for holding articles of table service.
  • sideburns — If a man has sideburns, he has a strip of hair growing down the side of each cheek.
  • sigsberen — Archaic. a series of small hills.
  • skybridge — Also called skywalk. a bridgelike structure for pedestrians built to link one building with another over a public alley or street.
  • slice bar — a long-handled instrument with a blade at the end, for clearing away or breaking up clinkers, coal, etc., in a furnace.
  • snakebird — anhinga.
  • sobriquet — a nickname.
  • soilborne — carried in soil
  • sorbitize — to turn metal into a form containing sorbite
  • spareribs — a cut of meat from the rib section, especially of pork or beef, with some meat adhering to the bones.
  • spiderweb — to cover with a spider web or fine lines resembling a spider web.
  • spielbergSteven, born 1947, U.S. film director.
  • steinbergSaul, 1914–1999, U.S. painter, cartoonist, and illustrator; born in Romania.
  • strikable — being cause for a strike, as by union members: strikable labor issues.
  • sub-tribe — any aggregate of people united by ties of descent from a common ancestor, community of customs and traditions, adherence to the same leaders, etc.
  • subaerial — located or occurring on the surface of the earth.
  • subeditor — a subordinate or junior editor.
  • subentire — (of parts of plants) slightly indented
  • sublinear — of, consisting of, or using lines: linear design.
  • submarine — a vessel that can be submerged and navigated under water, usually built for warfare and armed with torpedoes or guided missiles.
  • submitter — to give over or yield to the power or authority of another (often used reflexively).
  • subperiod — a subdivision of a time period
  • subregion — a division or subdivision of a region, especially a division of a zoogeographical region.
  • subscribe — to pledge, as by signing an agreement, to give or pay (a sum of money) as a contribution, gift, or investment: He subscribed $6,000 for the new church.
  • subseries — a group or a number of related or similar things, events, etc., arranged or occurring in temporal, spatial, or other order or succession; sequence.
  • subsoiler — one who operates a subsoil plow.
  • subursine — resembling a bear to some degree
  • subwriter — a person carrying out writing tasks for another writer
  • superbike — a high-performance motorcycle
  • superbity — pride
  • swinburneAlgernon Charles, 1837–1909, English poet and critic.
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