7-letter words containing i, b, r
- bushire — a port in SW Iran, on the Persian Gulf; nuclear power station. Pop: 166 000 (2005 est)
- bustier — A bustier is a type of close-fitting strapless top worn by women.
- butyric — of or obtained from butter
- butyrin — a colourless liquid ester or oil found in butter. It is formed from butyric acid and glycerine
- byliner — a person who writes articles with bylines
- byrgius — a crater in the third quadrant of the face of the moon: about 40 miles (64 km) in diameter.
- byrnies — a coat of mail; hauberk.
- byronic — of, like, or characteristic of Byron or his writings; romantic, passionate, cynical, ironic, etc.
- cabeiri — Cabiri.
- cabrini — Saint Frances Xavier(1850-1917); U.S. nun, born in Italy: first U.S. citizen canonized: her day is Dec. 22: called Mother Cabrini
- cabrito — the flesh of a young goat, used as food
- caliber — the size of a bullet or shell as measured by its diameter
- calibre — The calibre of a person is the quality or standard of their ability or intelligence, especially when this is high.
- cambrai — a town in NE France: textile industry: scene of a battle in which massed tanks were first used and broke through the German line (November, 1917). Pop: 33 738 (1999)
- cambria — Wales
- cambric — a fine white linen or cotton fabric
- carabid — any typically dark-coloured beetle of the family Carabidae, including the bombardier and other ground beetles
- carbide — a binary compound of carbon with a more electropositive element
- carbine — A carbine is a light automatic rifle.
- caribes — Plural form of caribe.
- caribou — A caribou is a large north American deer.
- catbird — any of several North American songbirds of the family Mimidae (mockingbirds), esp Dumetella carolinensis, whose call resembles the mewing of a cat
- cerberi — Also, Kerberos. Classical Mythology. a dog, usually represented as having three heads, that guarded the entrance of the infernal regions.
- cernlib — (library) The CERN Program Library.
- ciboria — Plural form of ciborium.
- cirebon — a port in S central Indonesia, on N Java on the Java Sea: scene of the signing of the Tjirebon Agreement of Indonesian independence (1946) by the Netherlands. Pop: 272 263 (2000)
- cliburn — Van [van] /væn/ (Show IPA), (Harvey Lavan Cliburn, Jr) 1934–2013, U.S. pianist.
- climber — A climber is someone who climbs rocks or mountains as a sport or a hobby.
- coimbra — a city in central Portugal: capital of Portugal from 1190 to 1260; seat of the country's oldest university. Pop: 148 474 (2001)
- colibri — a hummingbird
- corbeil — a carved ornament in the form of a basket of fruit, flowers, etc
- corbina — a marine food fish, Menticirrhus undulatus, found in Pacific waters off Mexico and California
- cowbird — any of various American orioles of the genera Molothrus, Tangavius, etc, esp M. ater (common or brown-headed cowbird). They have a dark plumage and short bill
- crabbit — bad-tempered
- cribbed — Of or pertaining to a crib, or things in a crib.
- cribber — a person who cribs.
- cribble — a sieve
- cumbria — (since 1974) a county of NW England comprising the former counties of Westmorland and Cumberland together with N Lancashire: includes the Lake District mountain area and surrounding coastal lowlands with the Pennine uplands in the extreme east. Administrative centre: Carlisle. Pop: 489 800 (2003 est). Area: 6810 sq km (2629 sq miles)
- curbing — material for a curb
- darbies — handcuffs
- debitor — the heading written at the top of the debit column in an accounts book
- debride — to remove (dead tissue or extraneous material) from a wound
- debrief — When someone such as a soldier, diplomat, or astronaut is debriefed, they are asked to give a report on an operation or task that they have just completed.
- decibar — a centimeter-gram-second unit of pressure, equal to 1/10 bar or 100,000 dynes per square centimeter.
- defiber — defibrate.
- deliber — (obsolete) To deliberate.
- deorbit — to depart deliberately from orbit, usually to enter a descent phase.
- derbies — Plural form of derby.
- dibbers — Plural form of dibber.
- dibbler — Also, dibber [dib-er] /ˈdɪb ər/ (Show IPA). a small, handheld, pointed implement for making holes in soil for planting seedlings, bulbs, etc.