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6-letter words containing o, b, d

  • bogged — wet, spongy ground with soil composed mainly of decayed vegetable matter.
  • boiled — that has been brought to boiling point
  • boland — an area of high altitude in S South Africa
  • bolden — Buddy, real name Charles Bolden. 1868–1931, US Black jazz cornet player; a pioneer of the New Orleans style
  • bolder — not hesitating or fearful in the face of actual or possible danger or rebuff; courageous and daring: a bold hero.
  • boldly — not hesitating or fearful in the face of actual or possible danger or rebuff; courageous and daring: a bold hero.
  • bolide — a large exceptionally bright meteor that often explodes
  • bolted — equipped with a bolt or bolts
  • bombed — under the influence of alcohol or drugs (esp in the phrase bombed out of one's mind or skull)
  • bonded — A bonded company has entered into a legal agreement which offers its customers some protection if the company does not fulfil its contract with them.
  • bonder — a long stone or brick laid in a wall as a header
  • bonduc — either of two species of leguminous shrub (Caesalpinia bonduc and Caesalpinia major) which produce hard, shiny seeds commonly known as nickernuts
  • boobed — a stupid person; fool; dunce.
  • boodie — a burrowing rat kangaroo, Bettongia lesueur, found on islands off Western Australia
  • boodle — money or valuables, esp when stolen, counterfeit, or used as a bribe
  • boomed — to sail at full speed.
  • booted — wearing boots
  • boozed — If someone is boozed or boozed up, they are drunk.
  • bordar — a smallholder of low social rank who held a cottage in return for menial work
  • bordel — a bordello
  • borden — ˈLizzie (Andrew) (ˈlɪzi ) ; lizˈē) 1860-1927; U.S. woman accused and acquitted in a sensational trial (1893) of murdering her father & stepmother (1892)
  • border — The border between two countries or regions is the dividing line between them. Sometimes the border also refers to the land close to this line.
  • bordet — Jules (Jean Baptiste Vincent) (ʒyl). 1870–1961, Belgian bacteriologist and immunologist, who discovered complement. Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1919
  • boride — a compound in which boron is the most electronegative element, esp a compound of boron and a metal
  • borked — to attack (a candidate or public figure) systematically, especially in the media.
  • bossed — Botany, Zoology. a protuberance or roundish excrescence on the body or on some organ of an animal or plant.
  • boudin — a French version of a black pudding
  • bounds — a limit; boundary (esp in the phrase know no bounds)
  • boyard — Russian History. a member of the old nobility of Russia, before Peter the Great made rank dependent on state service.
  • brando — Marlon. 1924–2004, US actor; his films include On the Waterfront (1954) and The Godfather (1972), for both of which he won Oscars, Last Tango in Paris (1972), Apocalypse Now (1979), A Dry White Season (1989), and Don Juan de Marco (1995)
  • broads — a group of shallow navigable lakes, connected by a network of rivers, in E England, in Norfolk and Suffolk
  • brodie — a suicidal or daredevil leap; wild dive: to do a brodie from a high ledge.
  • bronde — (of women's hair) artificially coloured to achieve a shade between blonde and brunette
  • broody — You say that someone is broody when they are thinking a lot about something in an unhappy way.
  • browed — having a brow of a specified kind (usually used in combination): a shaggy-browed brute.
  • buoyed — Nautical. a distinctively shaped and marked float, sometimes carrying a signal or signals, anchored to mark a channel, anchorage, navigational hazard, etc., or to provide a mooring place away from the shore.
  • byroad — a secondary or side road
  • byword — Someone or something that is a byword for a particular quality is well known for having that quality.
  • cobden — Richard. 1804–65, British economist and statesman: with John Bright a leader of the successful campaign to abolish the Corn Laws (1846)
  • combed — Simple past tense and past participle of comb.
  • cuboid — A cuboid is a solid object with two square surfaces and four rectangular surfaces. Each surface of a cuboid is the same size as the one opposite to it.
  • d.o.b. — d.o.b. is an old-fashioned written abbreviation for date of birth, used especially on official forms.
  • daboia — A large, venomous Asiatic viper of the genus Daboia.
  • dagoba — a dome-shaped shrine containing relics of the Buddha or a Buddhist saint
  • dayboy — a boy who attends a boarding school daily, but returns home each evening
  • debond — To remove a bonding agent such as glue, or to free from such a bonding.
  • debone — to remove the bones from (a piece of meat or fish)
  • deboss — the method of pressing a design onto a surface so that it creates a sunken area
  • debtor — A debtor is a country, organization, or person who owes money.
  • demobs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of demob.
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