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7-letter words containing l, b, t

  • blewits — an edible saprotroph agaricaceous fungus, Tricholoma saevum, having a pale brown cap and bluish stalk
  • blighty — Blighty is a way of referring to England.
  • blintze — a thin pancake folded or rolled around a filling, as of cheese or fruit, and fried or baked.
  • blister — A blister is a painful swelling on the surface of your skin. Blisters contain a clear liquid and are usually caused by heat or by something repeatedly rubbing your skin.
  • blither — to talk nonsense
  • blithes — a female given name.
  • blitter — a circuit that transfers large amounts of data within a computer's memory
  • blitzed — inebriated; drunk
  • blitzer — a person or thing that blitzes
  • blitzes — Military. an overwhelming all-out attack, especially a swift ground attack using armored units and air support. an intensive aerial bombing.
  • bloated — If someone's body or a part of their body is bloated, it is much larger than normal, usually because it has a lot of liquid or gas inside it.
  • bloater — a herring, or sometimes a mackerel, that has been salted in brine, smoked, and cured
  • blokart — a single-seat three-wheeled vehicle with a sail, built to be propelled over land by the wind
  • blotchy — Something that is blotchy has blotches on it.
  • blotted — a spot or stain, especially of ink on paper.
  • blotter — A blotter is a large sheet of blotting paper kept in a special holder on a desk.
  • blow it — fail
  • blowout — A blowout is a large meal, often a celebration with family or friends, at which people may eat too much.
  • bluetit — a common European tit, Parus caeruleus, having a blue crown, wings, and tail, yellow underparts, and a black and grey head
  • bluette — a short, brilliant piece of music
  • blunted — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • blunter — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • bluntly — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • blurted — to utter suddenly or inadvertently; divulge impulsively or unadvisedly (usually followed by out): He blurted out the hiding place of the spy.
  • blurter — a person who blurts
  • blushet — a modest young woman, perceived as prone to blushing
  • bluster — If you say that someone is blustering, you mean that they are speaking aggressively but without authority, often because they are angry or offended.
  • boatful — an amount or number that could be carried by a boat
  • bobtail — a docked or diminutive tail
  • boldest — not hesitating or fearful in the face of actual or possible danger or rebuff; courageous and daring: a bold hero.
  • boletus — any saprotroph basidiomycetous fungus of the genus Boletus, having a brownish umbrella-shaped cap with spore-bearing tubes in the underside: family Boletaceae. Many species are edible
  • bolster — If you bolster something such as someone's confidence or courage, you increase it.
  • bolt-on — Bolt-on buys are purchases of other companies that a company makes in order to add them to its existing business.
  • bomblet — one of a number of small bombs contained in a larger bomb
  • booklet — A booklet is a small book that has a paper cover and that gives you information about something.
  • boomlet — a small, short-lived, economic boom
  • bootleg — Bootleg is used to describe something that is made secretly and sold illegally.
  • borstal — In Britain in the past, a borstal was a kind of prison for young criminals, who were not old enough to be sent to ordinary prisons.
  • bothole — a hole in an animal's hide made by the larva of the botfly
  • bottled — Bottled gas is kept under pressure in special metal cylinders which can be moved from one place to another.
  • bottler — A bottler is a person or company that puts drinks into bottles.
  • botulin — a potent toxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum in imperfectly preserved food, etc, causing botulism
  • boulter — a long, stout fishing line with several hooks attached.
  • boulton — Matthew. 1728–1809, British engineer and manufacturer, who financed Watt's steam engine and applied it to various industrial purposes
  • boxplot — a graphical representation of numerical data consisting of a rectangular box with lines extending from each end
  • brantle — a French dance
  • brattle — a rattling or clattering sound
  • bristle — Bristles are the short hairs that grow on a man's chin after he has shaved. The hairs on the top of a man's head can also be called bristles when they are cut very short.
  • bristly — Bristly hair is thick and rough.
  • bristol — seaport in Avon, SW England: county district pop. 376,000
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