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7-letter words containing t, b, a, r

  • bartram — John1699-1777; Am. botanist
  • bartsia — any of several species of semiparasitic scrophulariaceous plants, including red bartsia (Odontites verna), a pink-flowered weed of cornfields
  • barytes — a colourless or white mineral consisting of barium sulphate in orthorhombic crystalline form, occurring in sedimentary rocks and with sulphide ores: a source of barium. Formula: BaSO4
  • baryton — a bass viol with sympathetic strings as well as its six main strings
  • bastard — Bastard is an insulting word which some people use about a person, especially a man, who has behaved very badly.
  • basterd — Misspelling of bastard.
  • basters — Plural form of baster.
  • bastrop — a city in N Louisiana.
  • bat ray — batfish (def 2).
  • batcher — anything that makes something into batches
  • batgirl — a girl who works at baseball games, carrying bats to players and moving other equipment
  • bathers — a swimming costume
  • battero — a heavy club
  • batters — Plural form of batter.
  • battery — Batteries are small devices that provide the power for electrical items such as radios and children's toys.
  • battler — a hostile encounter or engagement between opposing military forces: the battle of Waterloo.
  • batture — A sea bed or a river bed that has been raised or elevated.
  • bearcat — Informal. a person or thing that fights or acts with force or fierceness.
  • bearest — (archaic) Second-person singular present simple form of 'bear'.
  • beareth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bear.
  • beaters — Plural form of beater.
  • beatrix — full name Beatrix Wilhelmina Armgard. born 1938, queen of the Netherlands (1980–2013); abdicated in favour of her eldest son Willem-Alexander
  • beermat — A beermat is a cardboard mat for resting your glass of beer on in a bar or pub.
  • berated — to scold; rebuke: He berated them in public.
  • berchta — Perchta.
  • beretta — biretta
  • bertram — a masculine name: dim. Bertie; var. Bertrand
  • betread — to tread upon
  • biparty — involving two parties
  • biretta — a stiff clerical cap having either three or four upright pieces projecting outwards from the centre to the edge: coloured black for priests, purple for bishops, red for cardinals, and white for certain members of religious orders
  • blaster — a sudden and violent gust of wind: Wintry blasts chilled us to the marrow.
  • blather — If someone is blathering on about something, they are talking for a long time about something that you consider boring or unimportant.
  • blatter — a prattle
  • blawort — the plant Campanula rotundifolia
  • bloater — a herring, or sometimes a mackerel, that has been salted in brine, smoked, and cured
  • blokart — a single-seat three-wheeled vehicle with a sail, built to be propelled over land by the wind
  • boaster — a chisel for boasting stone.
  • boggart — a ghost or poltergeist
  • borotra — Jean (Robert) (ʒɑ̃). 1898–1994, French tennis player: secretary general of physical education under the Vichy government (1940)
  • borstal — In Britain in the past, a borstal was a kind of prison for young criminals, who were not old enough to be sent to ordinary prisons.
  • botargo — a relish consisting of the roe of mullet or tunny, salted and pressed into rolls
  • bra top — an item of women's clothing that looks like a bra but is worn as outerwear
  • brabant — a former duchy of W Europe: divided when Belgium became independent (1830), the south forming the Belgian provinces of Antwerp and Brabant and the north forming the province of North Brabant in the Netherlands
  • bracket — If you say that someone or something is in a particular bracket, you mean that they come within a particular range, for example a range of incomes, ages, or prices.
  • bradsot — braxy (def 1).
  • brantle — a French dance
  • brattle — a rattling or clattering sound
  • bravest — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
  • breadth — The breadth of something is the distance between its two sides.
  • breathe — When people or animals breathe, they take air into their lungs and let it out again. When they breathe smoke or a particular kind of air, they take it into their lungs and let it out again as they breathe.
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