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9-letter words containing n, o, i, r

  • borrowing — Borrowing is the activity of borrowing money.
  • botanizer — a person who botanizes
  • bothering — to give trouble to; annoy; pester; worry: His baby sister bothered him for candy.
  • bowstring — the string of an archer's bow, usually consisting of three strands of hemp
  • boyfriend — Someone's boyfriend is a man or boy with whom they are having a romantic or sexual relationship.
  • brainfood — any foodstuff containing nutrients thought to promote brain function, such as oily fish which is rich in omega-3 oils
  • brainwork — intellectual effort
  • brainworm — a microscopic, parasitic roundworm that infests the brain of large hoofed animals, as deer.
  • branchio- — gills
  • bridgeton — a city in SW New Jersey.
  • brimstone — Brimstone is the same as sulphur.
  • brimstony — of, relating to or resembling brimstone; sulphurous
  • bring off — If you bring off something difficult, you do it successfully.
  • bring out — When a person or company brings out a new product, especially a new book or CD, they produce it and put it on sale.
  • bringdown — a disappointment
  • brittonic — Brythonic
  • broadline — a company that deals in high volume at the cheaper end of a product line
  • brokering — the work of a broker or brokerage
  • bromantic — noting or pertaining to a bromance: You might call this movie a bromantic comedy.
  • bromelain — an enzyme derived from pineapple, used as an anti-inflammatory agent in homeopathy and as a meat tenderizer in the food industry
  • bromeosin — eosin (def 1).
  • brominate — to treat or react with bromine
  • bronchial — Bronchial means affecting or concerned with the bronchial tubes.
  • bronchium — a medium-sized bronchial tube
  • bronxitesthe, a borough of New York City, N of Manhattan. 43.4 sq. mi. (112 sq. km).
  • brookings — Robert Somers [suhm-erz] /ˈsʌm ərz/ (Show IPA), 1850–1932, U.S. merchant and philanthropist.
  • brookline — suburb of Boston, in E Mass.: pop. 57,000
  • brythonic — the S group of Celtic languages, consisting of Welsh, Cornish, and Breton
  • bupropion — an antidepressant drug used to help people stop smoking
  • burrowing — a hole or tunnel in the ground made by a rabbit, fox, or similar animal for habitation and refuge.
  • c horizon — the layer of a soil profile immediately below the B horizon and above the bedrock, composed of weathered rock little affected by soil-forming processes
  • c rations — tinned food formerly issued in packs to US soldiers
  • cafe noir — black coffee
  • cairngorm — a smoky yellow, grey, or brown variety of quartz, used as a gemstone
  • cannonier — Alternative form of cannoneer.
  • canonizer — a person who canonizes
  • canonries — Plural form of canonry.
  • cantorial — of or relating to a precentor
  • caparison — a decorated covering for a horse or other animal, esp (formerly) for a warhorse
  • capricorn — Capricorn is one of the twelve signs of the zodiac. Its symbol is a goat. People who are born approximately between the 22nd of December and the 19th of January come under this sign.
  • carangoid — resembling a fish of the family Carangidae; carangid.
  • carbamino — relating to the compound produced when carbon dioxide reacts with an amino group
  • carbanion — a negatively charged organic ion in which most of the negative charge is localized on a carbon atom
  • carbonari — a secret political society with liberal republican aims, originating in S Italy about 1811 and particularly engaged in the struggle for Italian unification
  • carbonise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of carbonize.
  • carbonite — An explosive manufactured from a variety of materials, including nitroglycerine, wood meal and nitrates.
  • carbonium — a transient, positively charged organic ion, as H3C+, R3+, that has one less electron than the corresponding free radical
  • carbonize — to turn or be turned into carbon as a result of heating, fossilization, chemical treatment, etc
  • carcinoid — a small serotonin-secreting tumour, usually slow-growing and occurring in the gastrointestinal tract, although it may spread to the liver
  • carcinoma — Carcinoma is a type of cancer.
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