6-letter words containing o, b, n
- brogan — a heavy laced usually ankle-high work boot
- broken — Broken is the past participle of break.
- bronco — In the western United States, especially in the 19th century, a wild horse was sometimes referred to as a bronco.
- bronde — (of women's hair) artificially coloured to achieve a shade between blonde and brunette
- bronte — Anne, pen name Acton Bell. 1820–49, English novelist; author of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1847)
- bronze — Bronze is a yellowish-brown metal which is a mixture of copper and tin.
- browne — Coral (Edith). 1913–91, Australian actress: married to Vincent Price
- browny — a dark tertiary color with a yellowish or reddish hue.
- bruton — John Gerard. born 1947, Irish politician: leader of the Fine Gael party (1990–2001); prime minister of the Republic of Ireland (1994–97)
- bryony — any of several herbaceous climbing plants of the cucurbitaceous genus Bryonia, of Europe and N Africa
- buffon — Georges Louis Leclerc (ʒɔrʒ lwi ləklɛr), Comte de. 1707–88, French encyclopedist of natural history; principal author of Histoire naturelle (36 vols., 1749–89), containing the Époques de la nature (1777), which foreshadowed later theories of evolution
- bugong — bogong.
- bunion — A bunion is a large painful lump on the first joint of a person's big toe.
- bunton — one of a number of struts reinforcing the walls of a shaft and dividing it into vertical compartments.
- burton — a kind of light hoisting tackle
- busoni — Ferruccio Benvenuto (fɛʀˈʀutˌtʃɔ bɛnvɛˈnutɔ) ; ferro̅otˈch^ō benˌveno̅oˈt^ō) 1866-1924; It. composer
- button — Buttons are small hard objects sewn on to shirts, coats, or other pieces of clothing. You fasten the clothing by pushing the buttons through holes called buttonholes.
- buxton — a town in N England, in NW Derbyshire in the Peak District: thermal springs. Pop: 20 836 (2001)
- bygone — Bygone means happening or existing a very long time ago.
- carbon — Carbon is a chemical element that diamonds and coal are made up of.
- cobden — Richard. 1804–65, British economist and statesman: with John Bright a leader of the successful campaign to abolish the Corn Laws (1846)
- cobnut — filbert
- confab — A confab is an informal, private conversation.
- corban — a gift to God
- corbin — Margaret (Cochran) 1751–1800, American Revolutionary military heroine.
- corbyn — Jeremy (Bernard). born 1949, British politician; leader of the Labour Party from 2015
- 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)
- dob in — to inform against or report, esp to the police
- dobbin — a horse, especially a quiet, plodding horse for farm work or family use.
- dobbyn — Dave. born 1957, New Zealand singer and songwriter; member of Th’Dudes (1976–80) with whom he had the hit singles “Be Mine Tonight” (1979) and “Bliss” (1979); founder of DD Smash (1981–85) with whom he released the album Cool Bananas (1982); solo albums include: Loyal (1986) and Footrot Flats: The Dog’s Tale (1986)
- doblin — Alfred [ahl-freyt] /ˈɑl freɪt/ (Show IPA), 1878–1957, German physician and novelist.
- doblon — a former gold coin of Spain and Spanish America, equal to two gold escudos.
- dobson — (Henry) Austin, 1840–1921, English poet, biographer, and essayist.
- dobuan — Dobu.
- donbas — Donets Basin
- drobny — Jaroslav (ˈjærəʊˌslɑːv; Czech ˈjarɔslaf). 1921–2001, British tennis and ice-hockey player, born in Czechoslovakia: Wimbledon champion 1954: a member of the Czech ice-hockey team in the 1948 Olympic Games
- ebonic — Alternative form of Ebonic.
- ebonji — a state of Nigeria, in the SE. Capital: Abakiliki. Pop: 2 173 501(2006). Area: 5670 sq km (2189 sq miles)
- engobe — a liquid put on pottery before glazing
- enrobe — Dress in a robe or vestment.
- entomb — Place (a dead body) in a tomb.
- enwomb — (poetic, archaic) To place or cause to be contained in the womb; to make pregnant; to conceive.
- fablon — a brand of adhesive-backed plastic material used to cover and decorate shelves, worktops, etc, and for handicraft purposes
- fanboi — Sometimes, fanboi. an obsessive male fan, especially of comic books, science fiction, video games, music, or electronic devices: Apple fanboys lined up to buy the new phone.
- fanboy — Sometimes, fanboi. an obsessive male fan, especially of comic books, science fiction, video games, music, or electronic devices: Apple fanboys lined up to buy the new phone.
- fynbos — (botany) Vegetation unique to the Cape Floral Kingdom made up chiefly of Proteaceae, restios and Ericaceae.
- gabaon — Gibeon.
- gabion — a cylinder of wickerwork filled with earth, used as a military defense.
- gaboon — Also called gaboon mahogany. the soft, reddish-brown wood of an African tree, Aucoumea klaineana, used for making furniture.