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7-letter words containing l, u, r

  • boulder — A boulder is a large rounded rock.
  • boulter — a long, stout fishing line with several hooks attached.
  • braudel — ˈFernand Paul (fɛʀˈnɑ̃ pɔl) ; fernänˈ p^ōl) 1902-85; Fr. historian
  • breslau — Wrocław
  • brimful — Someone who is brimful of an emotion or quality feels or seems full of it. An object or place that is brimful of something is full of it.
  • brotula — any of several chiefly deep-sea fishes of the family Brotulidae.
  • bruckle — brittle, fragile
  • bruegel — Jan (jɑn ) ; yän) 1568-1625; Fl. painter: son of Pieter
  • brulzie — a noisy dispute; a disturbance
  • brutely — in a brutish manner
  • bubbler — a drinking fountain in which the water is forced in a stream from a small vertical nozzle
  • buckler — a small round shield worn on the forearm or held by a short handle
  • builder — A builder is a person whose job is to build or repair houses and other buildings.
  • buirdly — well-built; stocky
  • bullary — a place where salt is prepared or boiled
  • bullier — a blustering, quarrelsome, overbearing person who habitually badgers and intimidates smaller or weaker people.
  • bulrush — a grasslike cyperaceous marsh plant, Scirpus lacustris, used for making mats, chair seats, etc
  • bulwark — A bulwark against something protects you against it. A bulwark of something protects it.
  • bumbler — to bungle or blunder awkwardly; muddle: He somehow bumbled through two years of college.
  • bungler — A bungler is a person who often fails to do things properly because they make mistakes or are clumsy.
  • burghal — (in Scotland) an incorporated town having its own charter and some degree of political independence from the surrounding area.
  • burglar — A burglar is a thief who enters a house or other building by force.
  • burlesk — a bawdy comedy show of the late 19th and early 20th centuries: the striptease eventually became one of its chief elements
  • burlily — in burly fashion
  • burnley — an industrial town in NW England, in E Lancashire. Pop: 73 021 (2001)
  • burrell — Paul. born 1958, British butler and confidant to Diana, Princess of Wales. After her death he was charged with but (2003) acquitted of stealing from her estate. His book, A Royal Duty (2003), revealed intimate details of her life
  • burrhel — a wild sheep, Pseudois nahoor, of Tibet and adjacent mountainous regions, having goatlike horns that curve backward.
  • busgirl — a waiter's assistant
  • butlery — a butler's room
  • butyral — a type of resin
  • butyryl — a radical of butyric acid
  • canular — shaped like a cannula; tubular.
  • caracul — the black loosely curled fur obtained from the skins of newly born lambs of the karakul sheep
  • careful — If you are careful, you give serious attention to what you are doing, in order to avoid harm, damage, or mistakes. If you are careful to do something, you make sure that you do it.
  • carolus — any of several coins struck in the reign of a king called Charles, esp an English gold coin from the reign of Charles I
  • cartful — the amount a cart can hold
  • caulker — a person who caulks the seams of boats or the like.
  • circuli — any of the concentric circles on each scale of a fish, each of which indicates the annual growth of that scale.
  • clamour — If people are clamouring for something, they are demanding it in a noisy or angry way.
  • cleruch — a settler in a cleruchy
  • cliburnVan [van] /væn/ (Show IPA), (Harvey Lavan Cliburn, Jr) 1934–2013, U.S. pianist.
  • closure — The closure of a place such as a business or factory is the permanent ending of the work or activity there.
  • clotbur — the burdock
  • cloture — closure in the US Senate
  • clouder — a visible collection of particles of water or ice suspended in the air, usually at an elevation above the earth's surface.
  • clouter — a blow, especially with the hand; cuff: The bully gave him a painful clout on the head.
  • clubber — A clubber is someone who regularly goes to nightclubs.
  • clumper — a heavy shoe
  • clunker — If you describe a machine, especially a car, as a clunker, you mean that it is very old and almost falling apart.
  • clurman — Harold (Edgar) 1901–80, U.S. theatrical director, author, and critic.
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