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8-letter words containing l, h, e

  • bachelor — A bachelor is a man who has never married.
  • backheel — (soccer) A kick played by the heel which typically travels in the opposite direction from which the player is facing.
  • baldhead — a person with a bald head
  • bashless — not ashamed; unabashed
  • bathless — without a bath
  • bechamel — a basic white sauce made of milk, butter, flour, and, sometimes, cream
  • beclothe — to put clothes on (someone)
  • bedlight — a bedlamp.
  • beerhall — a large pub specializing in beer
  • beheadal — a beheading
  • beholden — If you are beholden to someone, you are in debt to them in some way or you feel that you have a duty to them because they have helped you.
  • beholder — The beholder of something is the person who is looking at it.
  • behovely — useful
  • belching — to eject gas spasmodically and noisily from the stomach through the mouth; eruct.
  • bellpush — a button that is pressed to operate an electric bell
  • benchley — Robert (Charles)1889-1945; U.S. humorist
  • benthoal — relating to deep-sea plants and animals
  • bergmehl — a light powdery variety of calcite
  • bethrall — to make a slave of
  • bhelpuri — an Indian dish of puffed rice and vegetables
  • billhead — a printed form for making out bills
  • biphenyl — a white or colourless crystalline solid used as a heat-transfer agent, as a fungicide, as an antifungal food preservative (E230) on the skins of citrus fruit, and in the manufacture of dyes, etc. Formula: C6H5C6H5
  • blanched — to force back or to one side; head off, as a deer or other quarry.
  • blancher — someone who blanches
  • bleached — made lighter in colour
  • bleacher — Usually, bleachers. a typically roofless section of inexpensive and unreserved seats in tiers, especially at an open-air athletic stadium.
  • bleakish — quite pale
  • blencher — someone employed to scare or obstruct
  • blenheim — a village in SW Germany, site of a victory of Anglo-Austrian forces under the Duke of Marlborough and Prince Eugène of Savoy that saved Vienna from the French and Bavarians (1704) during the War of the Spanish Succession
  • blighted — Plant Pathology. the rapid and extensive discoloration, wilting, and death of plant tissues. a disease so characterized.
  • blighter — You can refer to someone you do not like as a blighter.
  • blithely — joyous, merry, or happy in disposition; glad; cheerful: Everyone loved her for her blithe spirit.
  • blokeish — denoting or exhibiting the characteristics believed typical of an ordinary man
  • blotched — Something that is blotched has blotches on it.
  • blowhole — the nostril, paired or single, of whales, situated far back on the skull
  • bluchers — a strong, leather half boot.
  • bluebush — any of various blue-grey herbaceous Australian shrubs of the genus Maireana
  • bluefish — a predatory bluish marine percoid food and game fish, Pomatomus saltatrix, related to the horse mackerel: family Pomatomidae
  • bluehead — either of two fish of the wrasse family, Thalassoma amblycephalum or Thalassoma bifasciatum
  • bog hole — a land-surface depression occupied by waterlogged soil and spongy vegetative material that cannot bear the weight of large animals.
  • bolthead — the head of a bolt
  • bolthole — a place of escape from danger
  • bootheel — an area of SE Missouri where the Missouri-Arkansas border dips southward forming a rectangular-shaped extension of the state.
  • borehole — A borehole is a deep round hole made by a special tool or machine, especially one that is made in the ground when searching for oil or water.
  • bothwell — Earl of, title of James Hepburn. 1535–78, Scottish nobleman; third husband of Mary Queen of Scots. He is generally considered to have instigated the murder of Darnley (1567)
  • breughel — Jan Bruegel
  • brueghel — Jan (jɑn). 1568–1625, Flemish painter, noted for his detailed still lifes and landscapes
  • bulkhead — A bulkhead is a wall which divides the inside of a ship or aeroplane into separate sections.
  • bullhead — any of various small northern mainly marine scorpaenoid fishes of the family Cottidae that have a large head covered with bony plates and spines
  • bunghole — a hole in a cask, barrel, etc, through which liquid can be poured or drained
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