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7-letter words containing t, e, r

  • blatter — a prattle
  • bleriot — Louis (lwi). 1872–1936, French aviator and aeronautical engineer: made the first flight across the English Channel (1909)
  • blether — blather
  • blister — A blister is a painful swelling on the surface of your skin. Blisters contain a clear liquid and are usually caused by heat or by something repeatedly rubbing your skin.
  • blither — to talk nonsense
  • blitter — a circuit that transfers large amounts of data within a computer's memory
  • blitzer — a person or thing that blitzes
  • bloater — a herring, or sometimes a mackerel, that has been salted in brine, smoked, and cured
  • blotter — A blotter is a large sheet of blotting paper kept in a special holder on a desk.
  • blunter — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • blurted — to utter suddenly or inadvertently; divulge impulsively or unadvisedly (usually followed by out): He blurted out the hiding place of the spy.
  • blurter — a person who blurts
  • bluster — If you say that someone is blustering, you mean that they are speaking aggressively but without authority, often because they are angry or offended.
  • bo tree — the sacred fig tree ( peepul) of Buddhism: Gautama is believed to have received heavenly inspiration under such a tree
  • boaster — a chisel for boasting stone.
  • bolster — If you bolster something such as someone's confidence or courage, you increase it.
  • booster — A booster is something that increases a positive or desirable quality.
  • bootery — a shop selling boots and shoes
  • bornite — a mineral consisting of a sulphide of copper and iron that tarnishes to purple or dark red. It occurs in copper deposits. Formula: Cu5FeS4
  • botcher — to spoil by poor work; bungle (often followed by up): He botched up the job thoroughly.
  • bottger — Johann Friedrich [yoh-hahn free-drikh] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1682–1719, German chemist.
  • bottler — A bottler is a person or company that puts drinks into bottles.
  • boulter — a long, stout fishing line with several hooks attached.
  • bourget — a suburb of Paris: former airport, landing site for Charles A. Lindbergh, May 1927.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • breaths — the air inhaled and exhaled in respiration.
  • breathy — If someone has a breathy voice, you can hear their breath when they speak or sing.
  • brenton — Howard. born 1942, British dramatist, author of such controversial plays as The Churchill Play (1974), The Romans in Britain (1980), (with David Hare) Pravda (1985), and several topical satires with Tariq Ali
  • brevete — patented
  • brevity — The brevity of something is the fact that it is short or lasts for only a short time.
  • bridget — 453–523 ad, Irish abbess; a patron saint of Ireland. Feast day: Feb 1
  • briquet — briquette.
  • brisket — Brisket is a cut of beef that comes from the breast of the cow.
  • bristle — Bristles are the short hairs that grow on a man's chin after he has shaved. The hairs on the top of a man's head can also be called bristles when they are cut very short.
  • britten — (Edward) Benjamin, Baron Britten. 1913–76, English composer, pianist, and conductor. His works include the operas Peter Grimes (1945) and Billy Budd (1951), the choral works Hymn to St Cecilia (1942) and A War Requiem (1962), and numerous orchestral pieces
  • brittle — An object or substance that is brittle is hard but easily broken.
  • brocket — any small deer of the genus Mazama, of tropical America, having small unbranched antlers
  • brokest — a simple past tense of break.
  • bromate — any salt or ester of bromic acid, containing the monovalent group -BrO3 or ion BrO3–
  • brothel — A brothel is a building where men can go to pay to have sex with prostitutes.
  • brother — Your brother is a boy or a man who has the same parents as you.
  • brouter — A device which bridges some packets (i.e. forwards based on data link layer information) and routes other packets (i.e. forwards based on network layer information). The bridge/route decision is based on configuration information.
  • brucite — the mineral form of magnesium hydroxide, translucent and white or pale green in colour
  • bruited — to voice abroad; rumor (used chiefly in the passive and often followed by about): The report was bruited through the village.
  • bruiter — a person who spreads a rumour
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