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9-letter words containing r, o, d

  • bromeliad — any plant of the tropical American family Bromeliaceae, typically epiphytes with a rosette of fleshy leaves. The family includes the pineapple and Spanish moss
  • bromfieldLouis, 1896–1956, U.S. novelist.
  • brondyron — a sword
  • brood bud — bulbil.
  • brood hen — a hen kept for breeding
  • broodless — with no brood
  • broodmare — mare for breeding
  • brookweed — either of two white-flowered primulaceous plants, Samolus valerandi of Europe or S. floribundus of North America, growing in moist places
  • brownwood — a city in central Texas.
  • browridge — the ridge of bone over the eye sockets
  • brushwood — Brushwood consists of small pieces of wood that have broken off trees and bushes.
  • buckboard — an open four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage with the seat attached to a flexible board between the front and rear axles
  • bud sport — a shoot, inflorescence, etc, that differs from another such structure on a plant and is caused by a somatic mutation; the differences can be retained by vegetative propagation
  • bulldozer — A bulldozer is a large vehicle with a broad metal blade at the front, which is used for knocking down buildings or moving large amounts of earth.
  • burdenous — burdensome
  • burgeoned — to grow or develop quickly; flourish: The town burgeoned into a city. He burgeoned into a fine actor.
  • burladero — a safe area for the bull-fighter in a bull ring
  • burn down — If a building burns down or if someone burns it down, it is completely destroyed by fire.
  • burst edo — Burst Extended Data Out DRAM
  • bush road — a rough road cut through forested land usually to serve a lumbering, mining, or other commercial company.
  • buzz word — a word, often originating in a particular jargon, that becomes a vogue word in the community as a whole or among a particular group
  • byproduct — A byproduct is something that is produced during the manufacture or processing of another product.
  • cagoulard — a member of a secret French organization, active 1932–40, that conspired to overthrow the Third Republic.
  • calfdozer — a small bulldozer
  • callboard — a notice board listing opportunities for performers
  • camcorder — A camcorder is a portable video camera which records both pictures and sound.
  • campeador — a champion
  • caprioled — Simple past tense and past participle of capriole.
  • car radio — a radio built into the dashboard of an automobile
  • caracoled — Simple past tense and past participle of caracole.
  • carangoid — resembling a fish of the family Carangidae; carangid.
  • carbonade — a stew of beef and onions cooked in beer
  • carbonado — a piece of meat, fish, etc, scored and grilled
  • carcinoid — a small serotonin-secreting tumour, usually slow-growing and occurring in the gastrointestinal tract, although it may spread to the liver
  • card vote — a vote by delegates, esp at a trade-union conference, in which each delegate's vote counts as a vote by all his or her constituents
  • cardamoms — Plural form of cardamom.
  • cardboard — Cardboard is thick, stiff paper that is used, for example, to make boxes and models.
  • cardphone — a public telephone operated by the insertion of a phonecard instead of coins
  • cardstock — paper stock stiff enough for the printing of business cards and similar uses.
  • carpooled — Simple past tense and past participle of carpool.
  • carronade — an obsolete naval gun of short barrel and large bore
  • cartloads — Plural form of cartload.
  • catchword — A catchword is a word or phrase that becomes popular or well-known, for example, because it is associated with a political campaign.
  • caudiform — (zoology) Resembling a tail.
  • cauldrons — Plural form of cauldron.
  • cedarwood — the wood of a cedar tree
  • centroids — Plural form of centroid.
  • ceratodus — any of various extinct lungfish constituting the genus Ceratodus, common in Cretaceous and Triassic times
  • cerebroid — resembling the cerebrum or the brain.
  • chancroid — a soft venereal ulcer, esp of the male genitals, caused by infection with the bacillus Haemophilus ducreyi
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