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10-letter words containing r, u, b, t

  • buonaparte — Bonaparte1
  • buonarroti — Michelangelo.
  • burckhardt — Jacob Christoph. 1818–97, Swiss art and cultural historian; author of The Civilisation of the Renaissance in Italy (1860)
  • bureaucrat — Bureaucrats are officials who work in a large administrative system. You can refer to officials as bureaucrats especially if you disapprove of them because they seem to follow rules and procedures too strictly.
  • burlington — a city in S Canada on Lake Ontario, northeast of Hamilton. Pop: 150 836 (2001)
  • burned-out — consumed; rendered unserviceable or ineffectual by maximum use: a burned-out tube.
  • burnettize — to preserve (timber) with a solution of zinc chloride
  • burns unit — a section of a hospital in which those with serious burns are treated
  • burnt lime — calcium oxide; quicklime
  • burnt-lime — Also called burnt lime, calcium oxide, caustic lime, calx, quicklime. a white or grayish-white, odorless, lumpy, very slightly water-soluble solid, CaO, that when combined with water forms calcium hydroxide (slaked lime) obtained from calcium carbonate, limestone, or oyster shells: used chiefly in mortars, plasters, and cements, in bleaching powder, and in the manufacture of steel, paper, glass, and various chemicals of calcium.
  • burst into — If you burst into tears, laughter, or song, you suddenly begin to cry, laugh, or sing.
  • burst page — banner
  • bus master — (architecture)   The device in a computer which is driving the address bus and bus control signals at some point in time. In a simple architecture only the (single) CPU can be bus master but this means that all communications between ("slave") I/O devices must involve the CPU. More sophisticated architectures allow other capable devices (or multiple CPUs) to take turns at controling the bus. This allows, for example, a network controller card to access a disk controller directly while the CPU performs other tasks which do not require the bus, e.g. fetching code from its cache. Note that any device can drive data onto the data bus when the CPU reads from that device, but only the bus master drives the address bus and control signals. See also distributed kernel.
  • bush shirt — bush jacket.
  • bushbeater — a person who conducts a thorough search to recruit talented people, as for an athletic team.
  • bushmaster — a large greyish-brown highly venomous snake, Lachesis muta, inhabiting wooded regions of tropical America: family Crotalidae (pit vipers)
  • butlership — the skills of a butler
  • butt-strap — (in metal construction) a plate which overlaps and fastens two pieces butted together.
  • butterball — a chubby or fat person
  • butterfish — an eel-like blennioid food fish, Pholis gunnellus, occurring in North Atlantic coastal regions: family Pholidae (gunnels). It has a slippery scaleless golden brown skin with a row of black spots along the base of the long dorsal fin
  • butterless — without butter
  • buttermere — a lake in NW England, in Cumbria, in the Lake District, southwest of Keswick. Length: 2 km (1.25 miles)
  • buttermilk — Buttermilk is the liquid that remains when fat has been removed from cream when butter is being made. You can drink buttermilk or use it in cooking.
  • butterweed — a North American herbaceous plant, Senecio glabellus, with yellow flowers
  • butterwort — a plant of the genus Pinguicula, esp P. vulgaris, that grows in wet places and has violet-blue spurred flowers and fleshy greasy glandular leaves on which insects are trapped and digested: family Lentibulariaceae
  • button ear — a dog's ear that folds forward completely.
  • buttressed — any external prop or support built to steady a structure by opposing its outward thrusts, especially a projecting support built into or against the outside of a masonry wall.
  • by request — in accordance with someone's desire
  • by-product — A by-product is something which is produced during the manufacture or processing of another product.
  • canterbury — a late 18th-century low wooden stand with partitions for holding cutlery and plates: often mounted on casters
  • capturable — to take by force or stratagem; take prisoner; seize: The police captured the burglar.
  • carbureted — (of a vehicle or engine) having fuel supplied through a carburetor, rather than an injector.
  • carburetor — A carburetor is the part of an engine, usually in a car, in which air and gasoline are mixed together to form a vapor which can be burned.
  • celebutard — (informal, pejorative, offensive, slang) A celebrity viewed as unintelligent; especially a celebrity who behaves badly in public.
  • cloudburst — A cloudburst is a sudden, very heavy fall of rain.
  • clubmaster — the manager of a gentlemen's club
  • combustors — Plural form of combustor.
  • contribute — If you contribute to something, you say or do things to help to make it successful.
  • corbel out — to support on corbels
  • coulterneb — The puffin.
  • counterbid — A counterbid is a bid that is made in response to a bid from another person or group, offering the seller more advantages.
  • counterbug — (humour)   A bug used as a relpy to refute another person's bug report, as in "counterargument".
  • court tomb — a type of Neolithic trapezoidal burial mound having a semicircular forecourt at one end and bounded by large standing stones, common in the British Isles.
  • croton bug — a small, winged cockroach (Blattella germanica); German cockroach
  • crumbcloth — a cloth placed under a dining table to protect the carpet from crumbs and other material
  • cub master — a man who organizes a pack of cub scouts
  • cucurbital — of or relating to the genus Cucurbitaceae
  • culbertson — Ely (ˈiːlaɪ). 1891–1955, US authority on contract bridge
  • culturable — able to be cultivated or cultured
  • cumberment — an obstruction or hindrance
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