0%

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

  • bob-bling — a repeated, jerky movement; bob.
  • bobsleigh — A bobsleigh is a vehicle with long thin strips of metal fixed to the bottom, which is used for racing downhill on ice.
  • boilingly — in a boiling manner
  • bombsight — a mechanical or electronic device in an aircraft for aiming bombs
  • bonington — Sir Chris(tian John Storey). born 1934, British mountaineer and writer; led 1970 Annapurna I and 1975 Everest expeditions; reached Everest summit in 1985
  • boogieing — Slang: Disparaging and Offensive. a contemptuous term used to refer to a black person.
  • boogieman — bogeyman.
  • boohooing — to weep noisily; blubber.
  • book gill — the gill of a horseshoe crab, composed of numerous membranous structures arranged like the leaves of a closed book.
  • booklight — a small light that can be clipped onto a book for reading by
  • boomingly — in a booming manner
  • 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.
  • bottoming — the lowest level of foundation material for a road or other structure
  • 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
  • bricolage — the jumbled effect produced by the close proximity of buildings from different periods and in different architectural styles
  • bridgeton — a city in SW New Jersey.
  • brighouse — a town in N England, in Calderdale unitary authority, West Yorkshire: machine tools, textiles, engineering. Pop: 32 360 (2001)
  • 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
  • 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
  • bungaloid — resembling a bungalow or bungalows or characterized by bungalows or structures resembling bungalows
  • burrowing — a hole or tunnel in the ground made by a rabbit, fox, or similar animal for habitation and refuge.
  • cogitable — conceivable
  • combating — to fight or contend against; oppose vigorously: to combat crime.
  • combining — the process or an act of combining two or more things
  • corbeling — the fashioning of corbels
  • cowboying — Present participle of cowboy.
  • debonding — Present participle of debond.
  • demobbing — Present participle of demob.
  • diabology — the study of the devil or devils
  • disoblige — to refuse or neglect to oblige; act contrary to the desire or convenience of; fail to accommodate.
  • disrobing — Present participle of disrobe.
  • eco-bling — equipment that is energy-efficient but less effective than simpler technology
  • embodying — Present participle of embody.
  • embossing — Present participle of emboss.
  • embroglio — Alternative form of imbroglio.
  • ennobling — Present participle of ennoble.
  • entombing — Present participle of entomb.
  • forboding — Alternative form of foreboding.
  • gabaonite — Gibeonite.
  • gabionade — a row of gabions submerged in a waterway, stream, river, etc, to control the flow of water
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?