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6-letter words containing l, b, e

  • bulled — the male of a bovine animal, especially of the genus Bos, with sexual organs intact and capable of reproduction.
  • buller — to make a bubbling sound
  • bullet — A bullet is a small piece of metal with a pointed or rounded end, which is fired out of a gun.
  • bulwerSir Henry (William Henry Lytton Earle Bulwer; Baron Dalling and Bulwer) 1801–72, British diplomat and author.
  • bumble — to speak or do in a clumsy, muddled, or inefficient way
  • bummel — a stroll
  • bundle — A bundle of things is a number of them that are tied together or wrapped in a cloth or bag so that they can be carried or stored.
  • bungle — If you bungle something, you fail to do it properly, because you make mistakes or are clumsy.
  • bunuel — Luis (lwis). 1900–83, Spanish film director. He collaborated with Salvador Dali on the first surrealist films, Un Chien andalou (1929) and L'Age d'or (1930). His later films include Viridiana (1961), Belle de jour (1966), and The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972)
  • burble — If something burbles, it makes a low continuous bubbling sound.
  • burele — the netlike pattern of colored lines or dots forming the background design of certain postage stamps.
  • burgle — If a building is burgled, a thief enters it by force and steals things.
  • burled — having burls that produce a distorted grain: burled lumber.
  • burley — a light thin-leaved tobacco, grown esp in Kentucky
  • bushel — A bushel is a unit of volume that is used for measuring agricultural produce such as corn or beans. A bushel is equivalent in volume to eight gallons.
  • bustle — If someone bustles somewhere, they move there in a hurried way, often because they are very busy.
  • butler — A butler is the most important male servant in a wealthy house.
  • buttle — to act as a butler
  • byelaw — a standing rule governing the regulation of a corporation's or society's internal affairs.
  • bylane — a side lane or alley off a road
  • byline — A byline is a line at the top of an article in a newspaper or magazine giving the author's name.
  • cabble — Metallurgy. to cut up (iron or steel bars) for fagoting.
  • cabell — James Branch1879-1958; U.S. novelist
  • cabled — Simple past tense and past participle of cable.
  • cabler — a cable broadcasting company
  • cables — Plural form of cable.
  • cablet — a small cable, esp a cable-laid rope that has a circumference of less than 25 centimetres (ten inches)
  • celebs — Plural form of celeb.
  • cobble — Cobbles are the same as cobblestones.
  • comble — the highest point of achievement or success in something
  • corbel — a bracket, usually of stone or brick
  • crible — dotted
  • cybele — the Phrygian goddess of nature, mother of all living things and consort of Attis; identified with the Greek Rhea or Demeter
  • dabble — If you dabble in something, you take part in it but not very seriously.
  • debile — having no strength, muscle, or power
  • debulk — (transitive, surgery) To remove part of (a malignant tumour).
  • diable — a type of brown sauce, typically made with wine, shallots, vinegar, herbs, and black and/or cayenne pepper
  • dibble — a small hand tool used to make holes in the ground for planting or transplanting bulbs, seeds, or roots
  • dimble — (obsolete) A bower; a dingle.
  • djebel — (chiefly in Arabic-speaking countries) a mountain: often used as part of a placename to indicate that the place is situated on or near a mountain: the Djebel Druze of southern Syria.
  • doable — capable of being done.
  • dobell — Sir William. 1899–1970, Australian portrait and landscape painter. Awarded the Archibald prize (1943) for his famous painting of Joshua Smith which resulted in a heated clash between the conservatives and the moderns and led to a lawsuit. His other works include The Cypriot (1940), The Billy Boy (1943), and Portrait of a strapper (1941)
  • dobule — (archaic) A fish, the European dace.
  • double — twice as large, heavy, strong, etc.; twofold in size, amount, number, extent, etc.: a double portion; a new house double the size of the old one.
  • dublet — Obsolete form of doublet.
  • dumble — (UK, dialectal) A dale with a stream.
  • ecbole — (rhetoric) A digression in which a person is introduced speaking his or her own words.
  • edible — fit to be eaten as food; eatable; esculent.
  • elbert — Mountpeak of the Sawatch range, central Colo.: highest peak of the Rocky Mountains of the conterminous U.S.: 14,443 ft (4,402 m)
  • elbing — a port in N Poland: metallurgical industries. Pop: 129 000 (2005 est)
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