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7-letter words containing l, b, t

  • battled — Simple past tense and past participle of battle.
  • battler — a hostile encounter or engagement between opposing military forces: the battle of Waterloo.
  • battles — Plural form of battle.
  • beamlet — a small beam of light
  • beastly — If you describe something as beastly, you mean that it is very unpleasant.
  • beatles — TheBrit. rock group (1961-70) including John Lennon (1940-80), Ringo Starr (born Richard Starkey) (1940- ), (James) Paul McCartney (1942- ; knighted 1997), & George Harrison (1943-2001)
  • beetfly — a muscid fly, Pegomyia hyoscyami: a common pest of beets and mangel-wurzels
  • beetled — Projecting over.
  • beetler — a person who operates a beetling machine,
  • beetles — Plural form of beetle.
  • belated — A belated action happens later than it should have done.
  • belfast — the capital of Northern Ireland, a port on Belfast Lough in Belfast district, Co Antrim and Co Down: became the centre of Irish Protestantism and of the linen industry in the 17th century; seat of the Northern Ireland assembly and executive. Pop: 281 000 (2011 est)
  • belfort — a fortress town in E France: strategically situated in the Belfort Gap between the Vosges and the Jura mountains. Pop: 50 417 (1999)
  • belmont — Alva Ertskin Smith Vanderbilt [urt-skin] /ˈɜrt skɪn/ (Show IPA), 1853–1933, U.S. women's-rights activist and socialite.
  • belt up — If someone tells you to belt up, they are telling you in a very impolite way to stop talking.
  • beltane — an ancient Celtic festival with a sacrificial bonfire on May Day. It is also celebrated by modern pagans
  • belting — the material used to make a belt or belts
  • beltman — (formerly) the member of a beach life-saving team who swam out with a line attached to his belt
  • beltway — A beltway is a road that goes around a city or town, to keep traffic away from the centre.
  • bendlet — a narrow diagonal stripe on a heraldic shield
  • bentley — Edmund Clerihew. 1875–1956, English journalist, noted for his invention of the clerihew
  • bergylt — a large northern marine food fish
  • bestial — If you describe behaviour or a situation as bestial, you mean that it is very unpleasant or disgusting.
  • bestill — to cause to be still
  • betitle — to give a title to
  • bibelot — an attractive or curious trinket
  • biblist — biblicist
  • bidault — Georges (ʒɔːrʒ). 1899–1983, French statesman; prime minister (1946, 1949–50). His opposition to Algerian independence led him to support the OAS: he was charged with treason (1963) and fled abroad
  • billety — semé of billets: azure, billety or.
  • bilsted — the American gum tree, Liquidambar styraciflua
  • biltong — strips of meat dried and cured in the sun
  • bimetal — an object or material made from sheets of two types of metal
  • bitable — which can be bitten
  • bitless — without a (horse's) bit
  • bitonal — consisting of black and white tones
  • blanket — A blanket is a large square or rectangular piece of thick cloth, especially one which you put on a bed to keep you warm.
  • blasted — Some people use blasted to express anger or annoyance at something or someone.
  • blaster — a sudden and violent gust of wind: Wintry blasts chilled us to the marrow.
  • blastie — a wretched, ugly little creature
  • blasto- — (in biology) indicating an embryo or bud or the process of budding
  • blatant — You use blatant to describe something bad that is done in an open or very obvious way.
  • blately — bashful; shy.
  • blather — If someone is blathering on about something, they are talking for a long time about something that you consider boring or unimportant.
  • blatted — drunk
  • blatter — a prattle
  • blawort — the plant Campanula rotundifolia
  • bleated — to utter the cry of a sheep, goat, or calf or a sound resembling such a cry.
  • bleaunt — a short tunic or blouse, worn in the Middle Ages.
  • bleriot — Louis (lwi). 1872–1936, French aviator and aeronautical engineer: made the first flight across the English Channel (1909)
  • blether — blather
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