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9-letter words containing t, e, b, i

  • tombigbee — a river flowing S through NE Mississippi and SW Alabama to the Mobile River. 525 miles (845 km) long.
  • tonbridge — a market town in SE England, in SW Kent on the River Medway. Pop: 35 833 (2001)
  • torbanite — Petrology. a dark-brown oil shale containing a large amount of carbonaceous matter.
  • trailable — capable of being trailed.
  • trainable — capable of being trained.
  • trebbiano — a type of grape and vine cultivated in Italy for making wine (by the same name)
  • trebizond — a medieval empire in NE Asia Minor 1204–1461.
  • treblinka — a Nazi concentration camp in Poland, near Warsaw.
  • trembling — to shake involuntarily with quick, short movements, as from fear, excitement, weakness, or cold; quake; quiver.
  • tribesman — a member of a tribe.
  • tribesmen — a member of a tribe.
  • tribulate — to trouble or oppress
  • tribunate — the office of tribune.
  • trilobate — having three lobes.
  • trilobite — any marine arthropod of the extinct class Trilobita, from the Paleozoic Era, having a flattened, oval body varying in length from 1 inch (2.5 cm) or less to 2 feet (61 cm).
  • true bill — a bill of indictment endorsed by a grand jury as being sufficiently supported by evidence to justify a hearing of the case.
  • true ribs — ribs that are attached by cartilage directly to the sternum; in humans, the upper seven pairs of ribs
  • tube-side — Tube-side processes are processes which happen in the tubes of a shell-and-tube heat exchanger.
  • turbidite — a sedimentary deposit laid down by a turbidity current.
  • turbinate — Also, turbinated. having the shape of an inverted cone; scroll-like; whorled; spiraled.
  • twin beds — matching single beds in a bedroom or hotel room
  • twinberry — the partridgeberry, Mitchella repens.
  • umberto i — (Umberto I) 1844–1900, king of Italy 1878–1900.
  • umbratile — shadowy; shady
  • unbaptize — to remove the effects of baptism
  • unbigoted — utterly intolerant of any creed, belief, or opinion that differs from one's own.
  • underbite — occlusion in which the lower incisor teeth overlap the upper.
  • untirable — not able to be fatigued or tired out
  • verbalist — a person skilled in the use of words.
  • verbality — wordiness; verbal diffuseness: a speech full of tedious verbality.
  • verbosity — the state or quality of being verbose; superfluity of words; wordiness: His speeches were always marred by verbosity.
  • veritable — being truly or very much so: a veritable triumph.
  • veritably — being truly or very much so: a veritable triumph.
  • vestibule — a passage, hall, or antechamber between the outer door and the interior parts of a house or building.
  • vibratile — capable of vibrating or of being vibrated.
  • vibrative — vibrating
  • visitable — capable of, suitable for, or worthy of being visited: a visitable island; a visitable museum.
  • waistbelt — a belt encircling the waist
  • waterbird — A bird that frequents water, especially one that habitually wades or swims in fresh water.
  • websites' — a connected group of pages on the World Wide Web regarded as a single entity, usually maintained by one person or organization and devoted to a single topic or several closely related topics.
  • wet basis — A wet basis is a measure of the water in a solid, expressed as the weight of water as a percentage of the wet solid.
  • wheatbird — A bird that feeds on wheat, especially the chaffinch.
  • whitbread — Fatima. born 1961, British javelin thrower: won gold at the World Championships (1987)
  • whitebait — a young sprat or herring.
  • whitebark — The North American pine Pinus albicaulis, found in mountainous and subalpine regions, often as krummholz.
  • whitebass — a freshwater fish, Morone chrysops, of the bass family Moronidae, native to North American lakes and rivers
  • whitebeam — a European tree, Sorbus aria, of the rose family, having leathery leaves, showy, white flowers, and mealy, orange-red or scarlet fruit.
  • whiteboys — a secret agrarian peasant organization, active in Ireland during the early 1760s, whose members wore white shirts for recognition on their night raids to destroy crops, barns, and other property in redressing grievances against landlords and protesting the paying of tithes.
  • whitecomb — a fungal disease infecting the combs of certain fowls
  • wilburite — a member of a conservative body of Quakers formed in 1845 in protest against the evangelicalism of the Gurneyites.
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