9-letter words containing t, e, b, i
- snakebite — the bite of a snake, especially of one that is venomous.
- snobbiest — condescending, patronizing, or socially exclusive; snobbish.
- sobriquet — a nickname.
- sorbitize — to turn metal into a form containing sorbite
- soundbite — short statement, quotation
- stabilate — a collection of living organisms, gathered on one occasion and preserved for a particular use
- stabilise — to make or hold stable, firm, or steadfast.
- stabilize — to make or hold stable, firm, or steadfast.
- steinbeck — John (Ernst) [urnst] /ɜrnst/ (Show IPA), 1902–68, U.S. novelist: Nobel prize 1962.
- steinberg — Saul, 1914–1999, U.S. painter, cartoonist, and illustrator; born in Romania.
- stickable — to pierce or puncture with something pointed, as a pin, dagger, or spear; stab: to stick one's finger with a needle.
- strikable — being cause for a strike, as by union members: strikable labor issues.
- studiable — application of the mind to the acquisition of knowledge, as by reading, investigation, or reflection: long hours of study.
- sub-tribe — any aggregate of people united by ties of descent from a common ancestor, community of customs and traditions, adherence to the same leaders, etc.
- subeditor — a subordinate or junior editor.
- subentire — (of parts of plants) slightly indented
- sublimate — Psychology. to divert the energy of (a sexual or other biological impulse) from its immediate goal to one of a more acceptable social, moral, or aesthetic nature or use.
- submitted — to give over or yield to the power or authority of another (often used reflexively).
- submitter — to give over or yield to the power or authority of another (often used reflexively).
- subtilize — to elevate in character; sublimate.
- subtitled — with dialogue on screen
- subtitles — a written translation superimposed on a film or television programme that has foreign dialogue
- subwriter — a person carrying out writing tasks for another writer
- superbity — pride
- swingbeat — a type of modern dance music that combines soul, rhythm and blues, and hip-hop
- tabellion — a scribe or subordinate notary
- tableside — the area around or beside a table.
- tableting — Tableting is the production of a disk-shaped solid by compaction or agglomeration of a powder.
- tablewise — in the form of a table or list
- talliable — subject to tallage, taxable
- tenebrism — a school, style, or method of painting, adopted chiefly by 17th-century Spanish and Neapolitan painters, esp Caravaggio, characterized by large areas of dark colours, usually relieved with a shaft of light
- tenebrity — the state of being dark
- terebinth — a Mediterranean tree, Pistacia terebinthus, of the cashew family, yielding Chian turpentine.
- the bible — the sacred writings of the Christian religion, comprising the Old and New Testaments and, in the Roman Catholic Church, the Apocrypha
- the bight — the major indentation of the S coast of Australia, from Cape Pasley in W Australia to the Eyre Peninsula in S Australia
- the birch — a bundle of birch twigs or a birch rod used, esp formerly, for flogging offenders
- the blind — people who are blind
- the blitz — the systematic night-time bombing of Britain in 1940–41 by the German Luftwaffe
- the-birds — a comedy (414 b.c.) by Aristophanes.
- thighbone — femur (def 1).
- thinkable — capable of being thought; conceivable.
- tie-break — a system for breaking a tie score at the end of regulation play by establishing a winner through special additional play, usually of a fairly short duration, as in tennis and soccer.
- timbering — the wood of growing trees suitable for structural uses.
- timberman — a person who prepares, erects, and maintains mine timbers.
- time bill — a bill of exchange payable at a specified date.
- time bomb — a bomb constructed so as to explode at a certain time.
- timetable — a schedule showing the times at which railroad trains, airplanes, etc., arrive and depart.
- tinbergen — Jan [yahn] /yɑn/ (Show IPA), 1903–94, Dutch economist: Nobel prize 1969.
- tinderbox — a box for holding tinder, usually fitted with a flint and steel.
- tittlebat — a child's name for the stickleback fish