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10-letter words containing s, r, b

  • resettable — able to be reset
  • resistible — that can be resisted.
  • resolvable — that can be resolved.
  • respirable — capable of being respired.
  • restorable — to bring back into existence, use, or the like; reestablish: to restore order.
  • resubmerge — to put or sink below the surface of water or any other enveloping medium.
  • reversible — capable of reversing or of being reversed.
  • reversibly — capable of reversing or of being reversed.
  • rhomboides — a rhomboid
  • ribbonfish — any of several marine fishes of the families Trachipteridae, Regalicidae, and Lophotidae, having a long, compressed, ribbonlike body.
  • rice blast — a disease of rice caused by the fungus Pyricularia oryae, characterized by elliptical leaf spots with reddish-brown margins, brownish lesions and neck rot of the fruiting panicles, and stunting of the plant.
  • rio balsas — Río, Río Balsas.
  • rise above — to get up from a lying, sitting, or kneeling posture; assume an upright position: She rose and walked over to greet me. With great effort he rose to his knees.
  • risibility — Often, risibilities. the ability or disposition to laugh; humorous awareness of the ridiculous and absurd.
  • roast beef — cow's meat cooked in oven
  • roberdsman — a robber
  • roboticist — a specialist in robots or robotics.
  • robustious — rough, rude, or boisterous.
  • robustness — strong and healthy; hardy; vigorous: a robust young man; a robust faith; a robust mind.
  • rose noble — a former gold coin of England, first issued by Edward IV, being the existing noble with a figure of a rose added to the types on either side: much imitated on the Continent, especially in the Netherlands.
  • rouseabout — an unskilled labourer in a shearing shed
  • roustabout — a wharf laborer or deck hand, as on the Mississippi River.
  • rubenesque — of or relating to the painter Peter Paul Rubens or his works, which feature full-figured women.
  • rubiaceous — belonging to the Rubiaceae, the madder family of plants.
  • rubiginose — rust-coloured or rusty
  • rubiginous — rusty; rust-colored; brownish-red.
  • rubinstein — Anton [an-ton;; Russian uhn-tawn] /ˈæn tɒn;; Russian ʌnˈtɔn/ (Show IPA), 1829–94, Russian pianist and composer.
  • ruby glass — glass having a red color resulting from the addition of gold, copper, or selenium to the batch.
  • ruby laser — a solid-state, pulsed laser that uses a ruby crystal to produce a very strong beam of red coherent light, used in making holographs and in cosmetic instruments.
  • russophobe — a person who hates or fears Russia or the Russians.
  • rustbucket — an old, run-down freighter, especially one whose hull is covered with rust.
  • sabretache — a leather case suspended from a cavalryman's saddle
  • saddlebred — an American breed of riding horse
  • sag harbor — a resort town on E Long Island in SE New York.
  • sage derby — a green-and-white Derby cheese flavoured with sage
  • sailboater — a person who sails a boat
  • saintsbury — George Edward Bateman [beyt-muh n] /ˈbeɪt mən/ (Show IPA), 1845–1933, English literary critic and historian.
  • salubrious — favorable to or promoting health; healthful: salubrious air.
  • sandbagger — a bag filled with sand, used in fortification, as ballast, etc.
  • sandbender — [IBM] A person involved with silicon lithography and the physical design of integrated circuits. Compare ironmonger, polygon pusher.
  • sarera bay — a large bay on the NW coast of New Guinea, in Irian Jaya, in Indonesia.
  • sassy bark — sasswood.
  • scaldberry — the bramble or blackberry, Rubus fruticosus
  • scaleboard — a very thin board, as for the back of a picture.
  • scanderbeg — (George Castriota) 1403?–68, Albanian chief and revolutionary leader.
  • scarabaeid — belonging or pertaining to the Scarabaeidae, a family of lamellicorn beetles, including the scarabs, dung beetles, June bugs, and cockchafers.
  • scarabaeus — scarab (defs 2, 3).
  • schaerbeek — a city in central Belgium, near Brussels.
  • schaumburg — a city in NE Illinois.
  • schoenberg — Arnold (ˈarnɔlt). 1874–1951, Austrian composer and musical theorist, in the US after 1933. The harmonic idiom of such early works as the string sextet Verklärte Nacht (1899) gave way to his development of atonality, as in the song cycle Pierrot Lunaire (1912), and later of the twelve-tone technique. He wrote many choral, orchestral, and chamber works and the unfinished opera Moses and Aaron
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