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6-letter words containing i, n, b

  • rebind — fasten together again
  • riband — a decorative ribbon.
  • ribbon — a woven strip or band of fine material, as silk or rayon, varying in width and finished off at the edges, used for ornament, tying, etc.
  • rub in — to subject the surface of (a thing or person) to pressure and friction, as in cleaning, smoothing, polishing, coating, massaging, or soothing: to rub a table top with wax polish; to rub the entire back area.
  • rybnik — a city in S Poland, in Katowice province,on the Nacyna River.
  • sabina — a female given name: from a Latin word meaning “a Sabine woman.”.
  • sabine — of or belonging to an ancient people of central Italy who lived chiefly in the Apennines northeast of Rome and were subjugated by the Romans about 290 b.c.
  • siabon — a hybrid animal bred from a gibbon and a siamang.
  • sinbad — Sindbad the Sailor.
  • tubing — a hollow, usually cylindrical body of metal, glass, rubber, or other material, used especially for conveying or containing liquids or gases.
  • ubangi — French Oubangi. a river in W central Africa, forming part of the boundary between the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Central African Republic, flowing W and S into the Congo (Zaire) River. 700 miles (1125 km) long.
  • unbias — to free from prejudice or bias
  • unbind — to release from bonds or restraint, as a prisoner; free.
  • unbitt — to unfasten or remove (a cable) from the bitts of a ship
  • upbind — to bind up
  • \begin — (text, chat)   The LaTeX command used with \end to delimit an environment within which the text is formatted in a certain way. E.g. \begintable...\endtable. Used humorously in writing to indicate a context or to remark on the surrounded text. For example: \begin{flame} Predicate logic is the only good programming language. Anyone who would use anything else is an idiot. Also, all computers should be tredecimal instead of binary. \end{flame} Scribe users at CMU and elsewhere used to use @Begin/@End in an identical way (LaTeX was built to resemble Scribe). On Usenet, this construct would more frequently be rendered as "" and "" (a la HTML), or "#ifdef FLAME" and "#endif FLAME" (a la C preprocessor).
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