8-letter words containing o, n, e, b
- netrebko — Anna. born 1971, Russian operatic soprano
- newborns — A recently born child or animal.
- newcombe — John (David). born 1944, Australian tennis player; winner of seven Grand Slam singles titles (1967–75), including three at Wimbledon (1967, 1970, 1971)
- newsboys — Plural form of newsboy.
- nobelist — a person who is awarded a Nobel prize.
- nobelium — a transuranic element in the actinium series. Symbol: No; atomic number: 102.
- nobleman — a man of noble birth or rank; noble; peer.
- noblemen — a man of noble birth or rank; noble; peer.
- noblesse — The nobility.
- nobodies — Plural form of nobody.
- nonbeing — the fact of existing; existence (as opposed to nonexistence).
- noncyber — Not cyber; noncomputer.
- none but — None but means only.
- nonnoble — not noble
- nonobese — not obese
- nose bag — feed bag (def 1).
- nose job — cosmetic surgery of the nose; rhinoplasty.
- nosebags — Plural form of nosebag.
- noseband — that part of a bridle or halter that passes over the animal's nose.
- notables — Plural form of notable.
- noteable — Misspelling of notable.
- notebook — a book of or for notes.
- november — the eleventh month of the year, containing 30 days.
- obedient — obeying or willing to obey; complying with or submissive to authority: an obedient son.
- obeisant — a movement of the body expressing deep respect or deferential courtesy, as before a superior; a bow, curtsy, or other similar gesture.
- oberland — a mountain region in central Switzerland, mostly in S Bern canton.
- oberon-2 — (language) A superset of Oberon-1, developed by H. Moessenboeck in 1991 to add object-orientation. Oberon-2 was a redesign of Object Oberon. It included type-bound procedures (equivalent to methods), read-only export of variables and record fields, open array variables, and a "with" statement with variants. It reintroduced the "for" statement. There is an Oberon-2 Lex scanner and Yacc parser by Stephen J Bevan of Manchester University, UK, based on the one in the Mo"ssenbo"ck and Wirth reference. Version 1.4.
- oberon-v — (Formerly Seneca). R. Griesemer, 1990. Descendant of Oberon designed for numerical applications on supercomputers, especially vector or pipelined architectures. Includes array constructors and an ALL statement. "Seneca - A Language for Numerical Applications on Vectorcomputers", Proc CONPAR 90 - VAPP IV Conf. R. Griesemer, Diss Nr. 10277, ETH Zurich.
- obnounce — (in ancient Rome) to announce an unfavorable omen.
- obstante — notwithstanding.
- obtained — to come into possession of; get, acquire, or procure, as through an effort or by a request: to obtain permission; to obtain a better income.
- obtainer — One who obtains.
- obtunded — to blunt; dull; deaden.
- obwalden — one of the two divisions of the canton of Unterwalden, in central Switzerland. 189 sq. mi. (490 sq. km). Capital: Sarnen.
- open bar — a bar at a reception that serves drinks whose cost has been borne by the host, an admission charge, a sponsor, etc.: Before the banquet there will be an open bar from 5 to 7 p.m.
- open-web — having a web of zigzag or crisscross lacing.
- openable — capable of being opened.
- openbill — Either of two species of bird in the genus Anastomus of the stork family Ciconiidae, with a distinctive gap between the mandibles of the closed bill.
- opinable — thinkable or able to be an opinion
- orenburg — a city in the SW Russian Federation in Asia, on the Ural River.
- ovenable — able to be cooked in an oven.
- ovenbird — an American warbler, Seiurus aurocapillus, that builds an oven-shaped nest of leaves, twigs, etc., on the forest floor.
- overbank — to have the balance staff oscillate so greatly that the fork of the lever fails to engage, rendering the escapement inoperative.
- overbind — To bind or restrict to an excessive extent.
- overborn — to bear over or down by weight or force: With his superior strength he easily overbore his opponent in the fight.
- overburn — to copy (information, music, etc) onto a CD over previously recorded data
- pennyboy — an employee whose duties include menial tasks, such as running errands
- pin bone — a hip bone on a cow, horse or similar animal, that sticks out
- quiberon — a peninsula in NW France, on the S coast of Brittany: British naval victory over the French 1759. 6 miles (10 km) long.
- rathbone — Basil, 1892–1967, English actor, born in South Africa.