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7-letter words containing r, a, y

  • blarney — Blarney is things someone says that are flattering and amusing but probably untrue, and which you think they are only saying in order to please you or to persuade you to do something.
  • blu-ray — Blu-Ray is a type of video disk that is used for storing large amounts of high quality digital information.
  • brachy- — indicating something short
  • bradley — A(ndrew) C(ecil). 1851–1935, English critic; author of Shakespearian Tragedy (1904)
  • brambly — having or resembling brambles.
  • bramley — a variety of cooking apple having juicy firm flesh
  • brashly — impertinent; impudent; tactless: a brash young man.
  • brassey — brassie.
  • bravely — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
  • bravery — Bravery is brave behaviour or the quality of being brave.
  • brawley — a city in S California.
  • braying — the loud, harsh cry of a donkey.
  • breathy — If someone has a breathy voice, you can hear their breath when they speak or sing.
  • broadly — You can use broadly to indicate that something is generally true.
  • bryansk — a city in W Russia. Pop: 428 000 (2005 est)
  • bryozoa — a phylum of invertebrates comprising about 4000 marine and freshwater species of bryozoans.
  • bullary — a place where salt is prepared or boiled
  • burnaby — city in SW British Columbia, Canada; suburb of Vancouver: pop. 179,000
  • bursary — A bursary is a sum of money which is given to someone to allow them to study in a college or university.
  • butyral — a type of resin
  • by-road — a side road.
  • byreman — a man who works in a byre
  • byrlady — a mild oath
  • cadbury — George. 1839–1922, British Quaker industrialist and philanthropist. He established, with his brother Richard Cadbury (1835–99), the chocolate-making company Cadbury Brothers and the garden village Bournville, near Birmingham, for their workers
  • calgary — a city in Canada, in S Alberta: centre of a large agricultural region; oilfields. Pop: 879 277 (2001)
  • caloyer — a monk of the Greek Orthodox Church, esp of the Basilian Order
  • calvary — a representation of Christ's crucifixion, usually sculptured and in the open air
  • camelry — the part of an army composed of troops mounted on camels
  • campery — campness
  • cankery — having a canker or cankers
  • cannery — A cannery is a factory where food is canned.
  • canonry — the office, benefice, or status of a canon
  • caprify — to induce (a fig) to ripen
  • caraway — Caraway is a plant with strong-tasting seeds that are used in cooking. Caraway seeds are often used to flavour bread and cakes.
  • carboys — Plural form of carboy.
  • carlyle — Robert. born 1961, Scottish actor; his work includes the television series Cracker and Hamish Macbeth and the films Trainspotting (1996), The Full Monty (1997), The Beach (2000), and 28 Weeks Later (2007)
  • carnify — (esp of lung tissue, as the result of pneumonia) to be altered so as to resemble skeletal muscle
  • carolyn — a feminine name
  • carroty — of a reddish or yellowish-orange colour
  • carryed — Simple past tense and past participle of carry; archaic spelling of carried.
  • carryon — Alternative spelling of carry-on.
  • cartway — a cart track
  • carvery — an eating establishment at which customers pay a set price and may then have unrestricted helpings of food from a variety of meats, salads, and other vegetables
  • castory — the dye derived from beaver pelts
  • cattery — A cattery is a place where you can leave your cat to be looked after when you go on holiday.
  • cautery — the coagulation of blood or destruction of body tissue by cauterizing
  • cauvery — a river in S India, rising in the Western Ghats and flowing southeast to the Bay of Bengal. Length: 765 km (475 miles)
  • cavalry — The cavalry is the part of an army that uses armoured vehicles for fighting.
  • cawdrey — Robert. 16th–17th-century English schoolmaster and lexicographer: compiled the first English dictionary (A Table Alphabeticall) in 1604
  • cellary — Characteristic of a cellar; musty, gloomy, etc.
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