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10-letter words containing s, a, r, e

  • bridesmaid — A bridesmaid is a woman or a girl who helps and accompanies a bride on her wedding day.
  • brix scale — a scale for calibrating hydrometers used for measuring the concentration and density of sugar solutions at a given temperature
  • broad seal — the official seal of a nation and its government
  • broadscale — on a broad scale; extensive; spread over a wide area
  • broadsheet — A broadsheet is a newspaper that is printed on large sheets of paper. Broadsheets are generally considered to be more serious than other newspapers. Compare tabloid.
  • bromegrass — any of various grasses of the genus Bromus, having small flower spikes in loose drooping clusters. Some species are used for hay
  • brunfelsia — any of various shrubs or small trees belonging to the genus Brunfelsia, of the nightshade family, native to tropical America, having white or purple tubular or bell-shaped flowers.
  • bruschetta — Bruschetta is a slice of toasted bread which is brushed with olive oil and usually covered with chopped tomatoes.
  • bubs grade — a baby
  • buckpasser — a person who avoids responsibility by shifting it to another, especially unjustly or improperly.
  • 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.
  • bushbeater — a person who conducts a thorough search to recruit talented people, as for an athletic team.
  • bushhammer — a hammer with small pyramids projecting from its working face, used for dressing stone
  • bushmaster — a large greyish-brown highly venomous snake, Lachesis muta, inhabiting wooded regions of tropical America: family Crotalidae (pit vipers)
  • bushranger — an escaped convict or robber living in the bush
  • bushwalker — a person who hikes through bushland
  • by-passers — a road enabling motorists to avoid a city or other heavy traffic points or to drive around an obstruction.
  • cablegrams — Plural form of cablegram.
  • cabriolets — Plural form of cabriolet.
  • cadaverous — If you describe someone as cadaverous, you mean they are extremely thin and pale.
  • caesareans — Plural form of caesarean, an alternative capitalization of 'Caesarean'.
  • cafeterias — Plural form of cafeteria.
  • calcareous — of, containing, or resembling calcium carbonate; chalky
  • calcsinter — travertine.
  • calibrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of calibrate.
  • camcorders — Plural form of camcorder.
  • camelshair — (attributive) The hair of a camel, used for paintbrushes etc.
  • camera-shy — Someone who is camera-shy is nervous and uncomfortable about being filmed or about having their photograph taken.
  • cameralism — any of the mercantilist economists or public servants in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries who held that the economic power of a nation can be enhanced by increasing its monetary wealth, as by the accumulation of bullion.
  • cameralist — any of the mercantilist economists or public servants in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries who held that the economic power of a nation can be enhanced by increasing its monetary wealth, as by the accumulation of bullion.
  • campership — financial aid given to a needy youngster to attend summer camp.
  • campestral — of or relating to open fields or country
  • cane grass — any of several tall perennial hard-stemmed grasses, esp Eragrostis australasica, of inland swamps
  • cane sugar — the sucrose obtained from sugar cane, which is identical to that obtained from sugar beet
  • canebrakes — Plural form of canebrake.
  • canephoros — in ancient Greece, any of the maidens who carried on her head a basket holding the sacred things used at feasts
  • cannelures — Plural form of cannelure.
  • cannisters — Plural form of cannister.
  • cannoneers — Plural form of cannoneer.
  • cantor set — the set obtained from the closed interval from 0 to 1 by removing the middle third from the interval, then the middle third from each of the two remaining sets, and continuing the process indefinitely.
  • canvassers — Plural form of canvasser.
  • capistrate — (zoology, rare) hooded; cowled.
  • capraesque — relating to or in the style of the movies of Frank Capra, focusing on courage and its positive effects and the triumph of the underdog.
  • capsomeres — Plural form of capsomere.
  • car stereo — a stereo built into the dashboard of an automobile
  • carabiners — Plural form of carabiner.
  • caramelise — (cooking) To convert sugar into caramel.
  • caravaners — Also, caravaneer, C01/C0128700 kar-uh-va-neer, ˌkær ə væˈnɪər. a leader of a caravan. a person who travels or lives in a caravan.
  • carbineers — Plural form of carbineer.
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