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7-letter words containing r, a, b

  • auberge — an inn or tavern
  • avebury — a village in Wiltshire, site of an extensive Neolithic stone circle
  • averbal — Not verbal; without words and speech.
  • awlbird — the green woodpecker
  • axebird — a nightjar of northern Queensland and New Guinea with a cry that sounds like a chopping axe
  • b quark — the quark having electric charge −1/3 times the elementary charge and bottom quantum number −1. It is more massive than the up, down, strange, and charmed quarks.
  • b-grade — A B-grade person or thing is one that you consider to be inferior or of poor quality.
  • babbler — a person who babbles
  • bacardi — a cocktail made with Bacardi rum, grenadine, and lime juice.
  • baccara — a gambling game at cards played by a banker and two or more punters who bet against the banker.
  • backare — an instruction to keep one's distance; back off!
  • backbar — a construction of shelves and counter space behind a bar, used for storing bottles, glasses, etc.
  • backers — Plural form of backer.
  • backrub — therapeutic manipulation of the muscles of the back; massage of the back.
  • baconer — a pig that weighs between 83 and 101 kg, from which bacon is cut
  • bactria — an ancient country of SW Asia, between the Hindu Kush mountains and the Oxus River: forms the present Balkh region in N Afghanistan
  • bad rap — bum rap.
  • badders — (UK, informal) badminton.
  • badgers — Plural form of badger.
  • baffler — Something that causes one to be baffled, particularly a difficult puzzle or riddle.
  • bagarre — a brawl, fight, scuffle
  • baggers — Plural form of bagger.
  • baggier — Comparative form of baggy.
  • bagwork — a revetment, consisting of heavy material sewn into bags, for protecting embankments against scour.
  • bagworm — the larva of moths of the family Psychidae, which forms a protective case of silk covered with grass, leaves, etc
  • bahadur — a title formerly conferred by the British on distinguished Indians
  • bahrain — an independent sheikhdom on the Persian Gulf, consisting of several islands: under British protection until the declaration of independence in 1971. It has large oil reserves. Language: Arabic. Religion: Muslim. Currency: dinar. Capital: Manama. Pop: 1 281 332 (2013 est). Area: 678 sq km (262 sq miles)
  • bailers — Plural form of bailer.
  • bairnly — childish, childlike, young
  • baiters — Plural form of baiter.
  • baker's — a bakery or shop run by a baker selling bread and usually cakes, buns etc
  • baldric — a wide silk sash or leather belt worn over the right shoulder to the left hip for carrying a sword, etc
  • balfour — Arthur James, 1st Earl of Balfour. 1848–1930, British Conservative statesman: prime minister (1902–05); foreign secretary (1916–19)
  • ballard — J(ames) G(raham). 1930–2009, British novelist, born in China; his books include Crash (1973), The Unlimited Dream Company (1979), Empire of the Sun (1984), Cocaine Nights (1996), and Super-Cannes (2000)
  • ballers — Plural form of baller.
  • balmier — Comparative form of balmy.
  • bambara — a member of a Negroid people of W Africa living chiefly in Mali and by the headwaters of the River Niger in Guinea
  • bamberg — a town in S Germany, in N Bavaria: seat of independent prince-bishops of the Holy Roman Empire (1007–1802). Pop: 69 899 (2003 est)
  • banaras — a former name of Varanasi.
  • banbury — a town in central England, in N Oxfordshire: telecommunications, financial services. Pop: 43 867 (2001)
  • bandari — a female monkey
  • banders — a thin, flat strip of some material for binding, confining, trimming, protecting, etc.: a band on each bunch of watercress.
  • bandora — A bass stringed instrument of the cittern family, having a long neck and a scallop-shaped body.
  • bandore — a 16th-century plucked musical instrument resembling a lute but larger and fitted with seven pairs of metal strings
  • bandrol — Alternative form of banderole.
  • bandura — a Ukrainian stringed instrument, resembling a lute
  • bangers — A sausage.
  • bankers — Plural form of banker.
  • banners — Plural form of banner.
  • banters — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of banter.
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