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6-letter words containing o, r, b

  • mobber — a disorderly or riotous crowd of people.
  • morbid — suggesting an unhealthy mental state or attitude; unwholesomely gloomy, sensitive, extreme, etc.: a morbid interest in death.
  • morbus — a disease
  • neibor — Obsolete form of neighbour.
  • nobler — distinguished by rank or title.
  • obdure — (obsolete) To harden.
  • oberon — (in medieval folklore) the king of the fairies.
  • oberth — Hermann Julius [hur-muh n jool-yuh s;; German her-mahn yoo-lee-oo s] /ˈhɜr mən ˈdʒul yəs;; German ˈhɛr mɑn ˈyu liˌʊs/ (Show IPA), 1894–1989, German physicist: pioneer in rocketry.
  • obeyer — to comply with or follow the commands, restrictions, wishes, or instructions of: to obey one's parents.
  • obiter — Incidentally; in passing.
  • objure — to put on oath
  • obvert — to turn (something) so as to show a different surface.
  • ogburnWilliam Fielding, 1886–1959, U.S. sociologist and educator.
  • olbers — Heinrich Wilhelm Matthäus [hahyn-rikh vil-helm mah-te-oo s] /ˈhaɪn rɪx ˈvɪl hɛlm mɑˈtɛ ʊs/ (Show IPA), 1758–1840, German astronomer and physician.
  • ombro- — indicating rain
  • orbier — like or pertaining to an orb.
  • orbits — the curved path, usually elliptical, described by a planet, satellite, spaceship, etc., around a celestial body, as the sun.
  • orbity — a bereavement or the state of being bereaved
  • orebro — a city in S Sweden.
  • oribis — Plural form of oribi.
  • osbert — a male given name: from Old English words meaning “god” and “bright.”.
  • osborn — Henry Fairfield [fair-feeld] /ˈfɛərˌfild/ (Show IPA), 1857–1935, U.S. paleontologist and author.
  • outbar — to keep out
  • owerby — over there
  • probed — to search into or examine thoroughly; question closely: to probe one's conscience.
  • prober — to search into or examine thoroughly; question closely: to probe one's conscience.
  • probie — a probationer, especially a firefighter who has recently joined a department.
  • probit — a normal equivalent deviate increased by five.
  • rabato — a wide, stiff collar of the 17th century, worn flat over the shoulders or open in front and standing at the back.
  • rabona — an unconventional method of kicking the ball in which a player plants one leg and brings the kicking foot round behind it
  • rabornWilliam F. 1905–90, U.S. admiral and government official: CIA director 1965–66.
  • rebato — rabato.
  • rebody — to give a new body to (something, esp a vehicle)
  • rebook — a handwritten or printed work of fiction or nonfiction, usually on sheets of paper fastened or bound together within covers.
  • reboot — to restart (a computer) by loading the operating system; boot again.
  • rebore — the process of boring out the cylinders of a worn reciprocating engine and fitting oversize pistons
  • reborn — having undergone rebirth.
  • rebosa — rebozo.
  • reboso — rebozo.
  • rebote — the rear wall of a cancha or jai alai court. Compare frontis.
  • rebozo — a long woven scarf, often of fine material, worn over the head and shoulders by Spanish and Mexican women.
  • recomb — to comb again
  • resorb — to absorb again, as an exudation.
  • rhebok — a large, deerlike South African antelope, Pelea capreolus, with pale-gray, curly fur and straight horns.
  • rhombi — an oblique-angled equilateral parallelogram; any equilateral parallelogram except a square.
  • ribbon — a woven strip or band of fine material, as silk or rayon, varying in width and finished off at the edges, used for ornament, tying, etc.
  • ribose — a white, crystalline, water-soluble, slightly sweet solid, C 5 H 1 0 O 5 , a pentose sugar obtained by the hydrolysis of RNA.
  • riboso — rebozo.
  • ribozo — rebozo.
  • robalo — snook2 (def 1).
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