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7-letter words containing r, o, b

  • bollard — Bollards are short thick concrete posts that are used to prevent cars from going on to someone's land or on to part of a road.
  • bolster — If you bolster something such as someone's confidence or courage, you increase it.
  • bombard — If you bombard someone with something, you make them face a great deal of it. For example, if you bombard them with questions or criticism, you keep asking them a lot of questions or you keep criticizing them.
  • bomberg — David. 1890–1957, British painter, noted esp for his landscapes
  • bombora — a submerged reef
  • bonaire — an island in the S Caribbean, part of the Netherlands Antilles until their dissolution in 2010, now a special municipality of the Netherlands: one of the Leeward Islands. Chief town: Kralendijk. Pop: 11 537 (2007 est). Area: about 288 sq km (111 sq miles)
  • bonfire — A bonfire is a fire that is made outdoors, usually to burn rubbish. Bonfires are also sometimes lit as part of a celebration.
  • bonheur — Rosa (roza). 1822–99, French painter of animals
  • bonjour — hello
  • bonkers — If you say that someone is bonkers, you mean that they are silly or act in a crazy way.
  • bonnard — Pierre (pjɛr). 1867–1947, French painter and lithographer, noted for the effects of light and colour in his landscapes and sunlit interiors
  • bonsoir — good evening
  • boobird — a person who habitually criticizes or jeers
  • boodler — a person involved in bribery or corruption
  • boorish — Boorish behaviour is rough, uneducated, and rude.
  • booster — A booster is something that increases a positive or desirable quality.
  • bootery — a shop selling boots and shoes
  • boracic — boric
  • borasca — (especially in the Mediterranean) a squall, usually accompanied by thunder and lightning.
  • borasco — (especially in the Mediterranean) a squall, usually accompanied by thunder and lightning.
  • borazon — an extremely hard form of boron nitride
  • borders — administrative division of S Scotland, on the English border: 1,800 sq mi (4,662 sq km); pop. 101,000
  • bordure — the outer edge of a shield, esp when decorated distinctively
  • boredom — Boredom is the state of being bored.
  • borelli — Giovanni Alfonso [joh-vah-nee al-fon-soh,, -zoh,, jee-uh-;; Italian jaw-vahn-nee ahl-fawn-zaw] /dʒoʊˈvɑ ni ælˈfɒn soʊ,, -zoʊ,, ˌdʒi ə-;; Italian dʒɔˈvɑn ni ɑlˈfɔn zɔ/ (Show IPA), 1608–79, Italian astronomer, physicist, and physiologist.
  • borglum — (John) Gutzon (ˈɡʌtsən). 1867–1941, US sculptor, noted for his monumental busts of US presidents carved in the mountainside of Mount Rushmore
  • borings — Machinery. the act or process of making or enlarging a hole. the hole so made.
  • boris i — known as Boris of Bulgaria. died 907 ad, khan of Bulgaria. His reign saw the conversion of Bulgaria to Christianity and the birth of a national literature
  • borisov — a city in N central Byelorussia, NE of Minsk.
  • borking — to attack (a candidate or public figure) systematically, especially in the media.
  • borlaug — Norman (Ernest). 1914–2009, US agronomist, who bred new strains of high-yielding cereal crops for use in developing countries. Nobel peace prize 1970
  • bormann — Martin. 1900–45, German Nazi politician; Hitler's adviser and private secretary (1942–45): committed suicide
  • bornean — of or relating to Borneo or its inhabitants
  • borneol — a white solid terpene alcohol extracted from the Malaysian tree Dryobalanops aromatica, used in perfume and in the manufacture of organic esters. Formula: C10H17OH
  • bornite — a mineral consisting of a sulphide of copper and iron that tarnishes to purple or dark red. It occurs in copper deposits. Formula: Cu5FeS4
  • borodin — Aleksandr Porfirevich (alɪkˈsandr pərfiˈrjevitʃ). 1834–87, Russian composer, whose works include the unfinished opera Prince Igor, symphonies, songs, and chamber music
  • boronia — any aromatic rutaceous shrub of the Australian genus Boronia
  • boronic — of or relating to boron
  • borotra — Jean (Robert) (ʒɑ̃). 1898–1994, French tennis player: secretary general of physical education under the Vichy government (1940)
  • borough — A borough is a town, or a district within a large town, which has its own council.
  • borscht — a Russian and Polish soup based on beetroot
  • borstal — In Britain in the past, a borstal was a kind of prison for young criminals, who were not old enough to be sent to ordinary prisons.
  • bossier — studded with bosses.
  • bostryx — a type of cymose inflorescence normally affecting all flowers on one side of the rachis
  • botargo — a relish consisting of the roe of mullet or tunny, salted and pressed into rolls
  • botcher — to spoil by poor work; bungle (often followed by up): He botched up the job thoroughly.
  • bottger — Johann Friedrich [yoh-hahn free-drikh] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1682–1719, German chemist.
  • bottler — A bottler is a person or company that puts drinks into bottles.
  • bottrop — an industrial city in W Germany, in North Rhine-Westphalia in the Ruhr. Pop: 120 324 (2003 est)
  • boucher — François (frɑ̃swa). 1703–70, French rococo artist, noted for his delicate ornamental paintings of pastoral scenes and mythological subjects
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