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

  • barretor — someone who deals fraudulently
  • barretry — barratry
  • barrette — A barrette is a small metal or plastic device that a woman uses to hold her hair in position.
  • barrista — Misspelling of barista.
  • barrulet — a narrow band across a heraldic shield, taking up one twentieth of the shield's height
  • barstool — a stool or seat, usually high and having a round, cushioned top, of a type often used for seating customers at a bar.
  • bartered — to trade by exchange of commodities rather than by the use of money.
  • barterer — One who barters: one who trades goods for other goods without involving money.
  • barthian — of or relating to Karl Barth, or his ideas
  • bartizan — a small turret projecting from a wall, parapet, or tower
  • bartlett — the Williams pear, used esp in the US and generally of tinned pears
  • barytone — having the last syllable unaccented
  • basketry — Basketry is baskets made by weaving together thin strips of materials such as wood.
  • bastards — Plural form of bastard.
  • bastardy — the condition of being a bastard; illegitimacy
  • bat girl — a girl or young woman who takes care of the bats and sometimes other equipment of a team.
  • bat turn — a sharp and sudden change in an aircraft's heading.
  • bateleur — a common African eagle, Terathopius ecaudatus, having a very short tail.
  • bathorse — a horse which carries a military officer's baggage; a military packhorse
  • bathrobe — A bathrobe is a loose piece of clothing made of the same material as towels. You wear it before or after you have a bath or a swim.
  • bathroom — A bathroom is a room in a house that contains a bath or shower, a washbasin, and sometimes a toilet.
  • bathurst — a town in SE Australia, in E New South Wales: scene of a gold rush in 1851. Pop: 27 036 (2001)
  • batteler — (at Oxford University) a student who charges food and other costs to a battel account
  • battener — someone who flourishes, grows fat, is strengthened
  • battered — Something that is battered is old and in poor condition because it has been used a lot.
  • batteree — (nonstandard) One who is battered (beaten by spouse etc.).
  • batterer — a person who batters someone
  • batterie — a movement in ballet involving the legs beating together
  • battlers — Plural form of battler.
  • bay tree — laurel (def 1).
  • bayreuth — a city in E Germany, in NE Bavaria: home and burial place of Richard Wagner; annual festivals of his music. Pop: 74 818 (2003 est)
  • bear out — If someone or something bears a person out or bears out what that person is saying, they support what that person is saying.
  • bear pit — a place, such as parliament or the stock market ,where there are a lot of aggressive, argumentative and competitive people
  • bearcats — Plural form of bearcat.
  • beartrap — A large trap used to catch a bear, usually as a foot trap.
  • beatrice — a feminine name: dim. Bea; var. Beatrix
  • beaufort — Henry. ?1374–1447, English cardinal, half-brother of Henry IV; chancellor (1403–04, 1413–17, 1424–26)
  • beauport — city in S Quebec, Canada: suburb of Quebec City: pop. 73,000
  • becarpet — to lay carpet on
  • bed tray — a meal tray with legs or supports at each end to fit across the lap of a person who is sitting up in bed.
  • 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
  • beermats — Plural form of beermat.
  • beltrami — Eugenio [e-oo-je-nyaw] /ˌɛ uˈdʒɛ nyɔ/ (Show IPA), 1835–1900, Italian mathematician.
  • berating — to scold; rebuke: He berated them in public.
  • bergamot — a small Asian spiny rutaceous tree, Citrus bergamia, having sour pear-shaped fruit
  • berretta — biretta
  • berthage — a place for mooring boats
  • bertrand — a masculine name
  • bestiary — a moralizing medieval collection of descriptions (and often illustrations) of real and mythical animals
  • bestreak — to streak
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