6-letter words containing l, b, e
- elbląg — a port in N Poland: metallurgical industries. Pop: 129 000 (2005 est)
- elbows — Plural form of elbow.
- elbrus — a mountain in SW Russia, on the border with Georgia, in the Caucasus Mountains, with two extinct volcanic peaks: the highest mountain in Europe. Height: 5642 m (18 510 ft)
- embail — to enclose in a circle
- embale — to bind or wrap (goods) into a package or bale
- emball — to enclose in a circle
- embalm — Preserve (a corpse) from decay, originally with spices and now usually by arterial injection of a preservative.
- emblem — A heraldic device or symbolic object as a distinctive badge of a nation, organization, or family.
- emblic — a deciduous tree, Phyllanthus emblica, found in eastern India and belonging to the family Euphorbiaceae, used for tanning
- emboil — to enrage or be enraged
- embola — Plural form of embolon.
- emboli — Plural form of embolus.
- emboly — (biology) embolic invagination.
- enable — Give (someone or something) the authority or means to do something.
- fabled — celebrated in fables: a fabled goddess of the wood.
- fabler — A writer of fables; a fabulist; a dealer in untruths or falsehoods.
- fables — a short tale to teach a moral lesson, often with animals or inanimate objects as characters; apologue: the fable of the tortoise and the hare; Aesop's fables.
- fablet — a large smartphone that is able to perform many of the functions of a tablet computer
- famble — (obsolete, slang) A hand.
- feeble — physically weak, as from age or sickness; frail.
- feebly — physically weak, as from age or sickness; frail.
- fimble — the male or staminate plant of hemp, which is harvested before the female or pistillate plant.
- flambe — Also, flambéed [flahm-beyd] /flɑmˈbeɪd/ (Show IPA). (of food) served in flaming liquor, especially brandy: steak flambé.
- foible — a minor weakness or failing of character; slight flaw or defect: an all-too-human foible.
- fumble — to feel or grope about clumsily: She fumbled in her purse for the keys.
- g-bell — bell
- gabble — to speak or converse rapidly and unintelligibly; jabber.
- gabels — Plural form of gabel.
- gabled — provided with a gable or gables: a gabled house.
- gables — Plural form of gable.
- gablet — a small gable
- gamble — to play at any game of chance for money or other stakes.
- garble — to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: to garble instructions.
- gelber — Jack, 1932–2003, U.S. playwright.
- gerbil — any of numerous small burrowing rodents of the genus Gerbillus and related genera, of Asia, Africa, and southern Russia, having long hind legs used for jumping.
- giblet — (usually plural) the edible viscera of a bird.
- gimbel — Jacob, 1850–1922, U.S. retail merchant.
- gimble — To grimace.
- glaber — Raoul [rah-ool] /rɑˈul/ (Show IPA), or Rudolphe [roo-dawlf] /ruˈdɔlf/ (Show IPA), c990–c1050, French ecclesiastic and chronicler.
- glebes — Plural form of glebe.
- globed — Simple past tense and past participle of globe.
- globes — the planet Earth (usually preceded by the).
- gobble — to swallow or eat hastily or hungrily in large pieces; gulp.
- goblet — a drinking glass with a foot and stem.
- habile — skillful; dexterous; adroit.
- hamble — (obsolete, transitive) To mutilate; hamstring; cut away.
- hebbel — (Christian) Friedrich [kris-tee-ahn free-drikh] /ˈkrɪs tiˌɑn ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1813–63, German lyric poet and playwright.
- herbal — of, relating to, or consisting of herbs.
- hobble — to walk lamely; limp.
- hubble — Edwin Powell, 1889–1953, U.S. astronomer: pioneer in extragalactic research.