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6-letter words containing o, l, e

  • bobble — A bobble is a small ball of material, usually made of wool, which is used for decorating clothes.
  • boblet — a two-man bobsleigh
  • bodleyGeorge Frederick, 1827–1907, English architect.
  • boggle — If you say that the mind boggles at something or that something boggles the mind, you mean that it is so strange or amazing that it is difficult to imagine or understand.
  • bohlen — Charles Eustis [yoo-stis] /ˈyu stɪs/ (Show IPA), ("Chip") 1904–74, U.S. diplomat.
  • boiled — that has been brought to boiling point
  • boiler — A boiler is a device which burns gas, oil, electricity, or coal in order to provide hot water, especially for the central heating in a building.
  • 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.
  • bolero — A bolero is a very short jacket, sometimes without sleeves. Boleros are worn mainly by women.
  • bolete — any fungus of the genus Boletus
  • boleyn — Anne. 1507–36, second wife of Henry VIII of England; mother of Elizabeth I. She was executed on a charge of adultery
  • bolger — James. born 1935, New Zealand politician; prime minister (1990–97)
  • bolide — a large exceptionally bright meteor that often explodes
  • boline — (in Wicca) a knife, usually sickle-shaped and with a white handle, used for gathering herbs and carving symbols
  • bolted — equipped with a bolt or bolts
  • boltel — Also, boutel, boutell, bowtel, bowtell. a convex molding, as a torus or ovolo.
  • bolter — an outsider in a contest or race
  • boodle — money or valuables, esp when stolen, counterfeit, or used as a bribe
  • bootle — a port in NW England, in Sefton unitary authority, Merseyside; on the River Mersey adjoining Liverpool. Pop: 59 123 (2001)
  • bordel — a bordello
  • boreal — of or relating to the north or the north wind
  • borrel — ignorant or unlearned
  • bottle — A bottle is a glass or plastic container in which drinks and other liquids are kept. Bottles are usually round with straight sides and a narrow top.
  • boucle — looped yarn giving a knobbly effect
  • boules — Boules is a game in which a small ball is thrown and then the players try to throw other balls as close to the first ball as possible.
  • boulez — Pierre (pjɛr). 1925–2016, French composer of modernist music; also a noted conductor
  • boulle — denoting or relating to a type of marquetry of patterned inlays of brass and tortoiseshell, occasionally with other metals such as pewter, much used on French furniture from the 17th century
  • boutel — boltel (def 1).
  • bowellSir Mackenzie, 1823–1917, Canadian statesman, born in England: prime minister 1894–96.
  • bowels — innards; entrails
  • bowleg — a leg that curves outwards
  • bowler — The bowler in a sport such as cricket is the player who is bowling the ball.
  • bowles — Paul. 1910–99, US novelist, short-story writer, and composer, living in Tangiers. His novels include The Sheltering Sky (1949) and The Spider's House (1955)
  • bowtel — boltel (def 1).
  • cajole — If you cajole someone into doing something, you get them to do it after persuading them for some time.
  • carole — a female given name.
  • cellos — Plural form of cello.
  • cerlox — a type of plastic binding used in strips to curl through the perforations in separate sheets of paper to bind them together
  • ceylon — an island in the Indian Ocean, off the SE coast of India: consists politically of the republic of Sri Lanka. Area: 64 644 sq km (24 959 sq miles)
  • chiloé — island off SC Chile: 3,241 sq mi (8,394 sq km); pop. 68,000
  • chole- — indicating bile or gall
  • cholee — a short-sleeved blouse or bodice, often one exposing part of the midriff, worn by Hindu women in India.
  • choler — anger or ill humour
  • cineol — a colorless, oily, slightly water-soluble liquid terpene ether, C 10 H 18 O, having a camphorlike odor and a pungent, spicy, cooling taste, found in eucalyptus, cajeput, and other essential oils: used in flavoring, perfumery, and medicine chiefly as an expectorant.
  • citole — cittern
  • cleoid — a claw-shaped dental instrument used to remove carious material from a cavity.
  • cleome — any herbaceous or shrubby plant of the mostly tropical capparidaceous genus Cleome, esp C. spinosa, cultivated for their clusters of white or purplish flowers with long stamens
  • cloche — A cloche is a long, low cover made of glass or clear plastic that is put over young plants to protect them from the cold.
  • cloeteStuart, 1897–1976, South African novelist, born in France.
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