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11-letter words containing s, e, r, b

  • backcrosses — Plural form of backcross.
  • backhanders — Plural form of backhander.
  • backmarkers — Plural form of backmarker.
  • backpackers — Plural form of backpacker.
  • backscatter — the scattering of particles or radiation, such as sound waves, X-rays, or alpha-particles, by the atoms of the medium through which they pass, in the backward direction
  • backseaters — Plural form of backseater.
  • backslapper — a person who backslaps; a hearty jovial person
  • backstabber — someone who attacks another deceitfully, behind his or her back
  • backstopper — a wall, wire screen, or the like, serving to prevent a ball from going too far beyond the normal playing area.
  • backstreets — Plural form of backstreet.
  • backstretch — the part of a racetrack farthest from the grandstand and opposite and parallel to the homestretch
  • backstroker — a person who swims the backstroke, especially a member of a competitive swimming team who specializes in the backstroke.
  • backstrokes — Plural form of backstroke.
  • backswimmer — an aquatic bug belonging to the family Notonectidae that swims on its back using its back legs as oars
  • bacteriosis — any bacterial disease
  • bacteroides — any of several rod-shaped, anaerobic bacteria of the genus Bacteroides, occurring in the alimentary and genitourinary tracts of humans and other mammals, certain species of which are pathogenic.
  • badderlocks — a seaweed, Alaria esculenta, that has long brownish-green fronds and is eaten in parts of N Europe
  • bake-wares' — heat-resistant dishes, as of glass or pottery, in which food may be baked; ovenware.
  • bakersfield — city in SC Calif.: pop. 247,000
  • baldcypress — any of a genus (Taxodium, esp. T. distichum) of cone-bearing trees of the baldcypress family, that grows in the swamps of the SE U.S. and normally sheds its small, pointed needles in the fall
  • ball-buster — an arduous, often unpleasant task.
  • ballesteros — Severiano (sevɛˈrjano). 1957–2011, Spanish professional golfer: won the British Open Championship (1979; 1984; 1988) and the US Masters (1980; 1983)
  • ballplayers — Plural form of ballplayer.
  • balsam pear — an Old World tropical vine, Momordica charantia, of the gourd family, having yellow flowers and orange-yellow fruit.
  • balustraded — Having balustrades.
  • balustrades — Plural form of balustrade.
  • bancassurer — a bank that sells insurance products
  • banderillas — Plural form of banderilla.
  • bandleaders — Plural form of bandleader.
  • bandmasters — Plural form of bandmaster.
  • baneberries — Plural form of baneberry.
  • banistering — Present participle of banister.
  • banjermasin — a seaport on the S coast of Borneo, in Indonesia.
  • bannerstone — a North American prehistoric stone implement in the form of a double-edged ax with a notch or hole, possibly for attaching a handle.
  • baptistries — Plural form of baptistry.
  • bárány test — a test which detects diseases of the semicircular canals of the inner ear, devised by Robert Bárány (1876–1936)
  • barbaresque — (particularly of art) stylistically barbaric
  • barbarities — Plural form of barbarity.
  • barbastelle — an insectivorous forest bat, Barbastella barbastellus, widely distributed across Eurasia, having a wrinkled face and prominent ears: roosts in trees or caves
  • barber shop — A barber shop is a shop where a barber works.
  • barber-shop — Also called, especially British, barber's shop. the place of business of a barber.
  • barbershops — Plural form of barbershop.
  • barents sea — a part of the Arctic Ocean, bounded by Norway, Russia, and the islands of Novaya Zemlya, Spitsbergen, and Franz Josef Land
  • baresthesia — the sense or perception of pressure.
  • barge spike — a square spike with a chisel point.
  • bargeboards — Plural form of bargeboard.
  • bargemaster — the owner of a barge
  • barley sack — a burlap bag.
  • barnstormed — Simple past tense and past participle of barnstorm.
  • barnstormer — to conduct a campaign or speaking tour in rural areas by making brief stops in many small towns.
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