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8-letter words containing s, r, b

  • barostat — a device for maintaining constant pressure, such as one used in an aircraft cabin
  • barracks — A barracks is a building or group of buildings where soldiers or other members of the armed forces live and work.
  • barrages — Plural form of barrage.
  • barriers — anything built or serving to bar passage, as a railing, fence, or the like: People may pass through the barrier only when their train is announced.
  • barrings — Plural form of barring.
  • barrista — Misspelling of barista.
  • barrooms — Plural form of barroom.
  • barspoon — a long-handled spoon, usually having the capacity of a teaspoon, used for mixing or measuring ingredients for alcoholic drinks.
  • barstool — a stool or seat, usually high and having a round, cushioned top, of a type often used for seating customers at a bar.
  • bas-rhin — a department of NE France in Alsace region. Capital: Strasbourg. Pop: 1 052 698 (2003 est). Area: 4793 sq km (1869 sq miles)
  • baseborn — born of humble parents
  • baselard — a historical (predominantly 13th–17th century) short Swiss sword with a distinctive crescent-shaped pommel and crossguard
  • baseword — (linguistics) The word used a base and upon whose stem affixes are added, forming new words.
  • basifier — anything that makes something alkaline
  • basilard — a medieval dagger having a tapering blade with straight transverse quillons and a T -shaped pommel.
  • basilary — Basilar.
  • basketry — Basketry is baskets made by weaving together thin strips of materials such as wood.
  • bass-bar — a strip of wood glued lengthwise inside the belly of instruments of the violin family, used to spread vibrations over the surface.
  • bastards — Plural form of bastard.
  • bastardy — the condition of being a bastard; illegitimacy
  • bathorse — a horse which carries a military officer's baggage; a military packhorse
  • bathurst — a town in SE Australia, in E New South Wales: scene of a gold rush in 1851. Pop: 27 036 (2001)
  • battlers — Plural form of battler.
  • baudrons — a cat
  • bavarois — Bavarian cream.
  • be arsed — to be willing, inclined, or prepared (esp in the phrase can't be arsed)
  • bearcats — Plural form of bearcat.
  • bearings — a sense of one's relative position or situation; orientation (esp in the phrases lose, get, or take one's bearings)
  • bearskin — A bearskin is a tall fur hat that is worn by some British soldiers on ceremonial occasions.
  • bed rest — a period of resting in bed
  • bed-rest — a prolonged rest in bed, as in the treatment of an illness.
  • bed-sore — an ulceration of the skin and subcutaneous tissue caused by poor circulation due to prolonged pressure on body parts, especially bony protuberances, occurring in bedridden or immobile patients; decubitus ulcer.
  • bedrails — Plural form of bedrail.
  • bedrolls — Plural form of bedroll.
  • bedrooms — Plural form of bedroom.
  • bedsores — Bedsores are sore places on a person's skin, caused by having to lie in bed for a long time without changing position.
  • bedstraw — any of numerous rubiaceous plants of the genus Galium, which have small white or yellow flowers and prickly or hairy fruits: some species formerly used as straw for beds as they are aromatic when dry
  • bedwards — towards bed
  • beerfest — a beer festival
  • beermats — Plural form of beermat.
  • beersies — beers
  • bejabers — by Jesus!
  • bepester — to pester persistently
  • bepraise — to praise highly
  • berascal — to accuse someone of being a rascal
  • berberis — any shrub of the berberidaceous genus Berberis
  • berceuse — a cradlesong or lullaby
  • berenson — Bernard. 1865–1959, US art historian, born in Lithuania: an authority on art of the Italian Renaissance
  • bermudas — a group of islands in the Atlantic, 580 miles (935 km) E of North Carolina: a British colony; resort. 19 sq. mi. (49 sq. km). Capital: Hamilton.
  • bernanos — Georges (ʒɔrʒ). 1888–1948, French novelist and Roman Catholic pamphleteer, best known for The Diary of a Country Priest (1936)
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