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

  • briolette — a pear-shaped gem cut with long triangular facets
  • brochette — a skewer or small spit, used for holding pieces of meat, etc, while roasting or grilling
  • brominate — to treat or react with bromine
  • bronxitesthe, a borough of New York City, N of Manhattan. 43.4 sq. mi. (112 sq. km).
  • brotherly — A man's brotherly feelings are feelings of love and loyalty which you expect a brother to show.
  • bryophyte — any plant of the phyla Bryophyta (mosses), Hepatophyta (liverworts), or Anthocerophyta (hornworts), having stems and leaves but lacking true vascular tissue and roots and reproducing by spores
  • bubbletop — a transparent dome, usually made of plastic or bulletproof glass, that serves as the roof or part of the roof of an automotive vehicle.
  • buhrstone — a hard tough rock containing silica, fossils, and cavities, formerly used as a grindstone
  • burrstone — buhrstone
  • burst edo — Burst Extended Data Out DRAM
  • buteonine — of or relating to hawks
  • byelostok — a city in E Poland.
  • byte-code — (file format, software)   A binary file containing an executable program, consisting of a sequence of (op code, data) pairs. Byte-code op codes are most often fixed size bit patterns, but can be variable size. The data portion consists of zero or more bits whose format typically depends on the op code. A byte-code program is interpreted by a byte-code interpreter. The advantage of this technique compared with outputing machine code for some particular processor is that the same byte-code can be executed on any processor on which the byte-code interpreter runs. The byte-code may be compiled to machine code ("native code") for speed of execution but this usually requires significantly greater effort for each new taraget architecture than simply porting the interpreter. For example, Java is compiled to byte-code which runs on the Java Virtual Machine.
  • bytownite — a rare plagioclase found in alkaline igneous rocks
  • cabriolet — A cabriolet is a type of car with two doors and a convertible top.
  • cancelbot — a computer program that deletes unwanted mailings to internet usergroups
  • canrobert — François Certain [frahn-swa ser-tan] /frɑ̃ˈswa sɛrˈtɛ̃/ (Show IPA), 1809–95, French marshal.
  • carbonate — Carbonate is used in the names of some substances that are formed from carbonic acid, which is a compound of carbon dioxide and water.
  • carbonite — An explosive manufactured from a variety of materials, including nitroglycerine, wood meal and nitrates.
  • cenobites — Plural form of cenobite.
  • cenobitic — Of or pertaining to a cenobite.
  • cobaltite — a rare silvery-white mineral consisting of cobalt arsenic sulphide in cubic crystalline form: a major ore of cobalt, used in ceramics. Formula: CoAsS
  • coenobite — a member of a religious order following a communal rule of life
  • cogitable — conceivable
  • cohabited — to live together as if married, usually without legal or religious sanction.
  • cohabitee — A person who cohabits with another.
  • cohabiter — to live together as if married, usually without legal or religious sanction.
  • cohobated — to distill again from the same or a similar substance, as by pouring a distilled liquid back upon the matter remaining in the vessel, or upon another mass of similar matter.
  • cohobates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cohobate.
  • columbate — any salt of columbic acid
  • columbite — a black mineral consisting of a niobium oxide of iron and manganese in orthorhombic crystalline form: occurs in coarse granite, often with tantalite, and is an ore of niobium. Formula: (Fe, Mn)(Nb)2O6
  • combaters — Plural form of combater.
  • combative — A person who is combative is aggressive and eager to fight or argue.
  • combatted — to fight or contend against; oppose vigorously: to combat crime.
  • combinate — combined
  • combretum — any tree or shrub belonging to the genus Combretum, native mainly to tropical and subtropical Africa and producing attractive flowers
  • combusted — Simple past tense and past participle of combust.
  • comptable — countable
  • comptible — (obsolete) accountable; responsible.
  • constable — In Britain and some other countries, a constable is a police officer of the lowest rank.
  • corn belt — region in the NC plains area of the Midwest where much corn and cornfed livestock are raised: it extends from W Ohio to E Nebr. and NE Kans.
  • countable — capable of being counted
  • courbette — A movement in dressage in which the horse makes a series of jumps on the hind legs with the forelegs in the air.
  • covetable — to desire wrongfully, inordinately, or without due regard for the rights of others: to covet another's property.
  • crossbite — a dental condition in which the lower teeth are in front of the upper teeth
  • cube root — The cube root of a number is another number that makes the first number when it is multiplied by itself twice. For example, the cube root of 8 is 2.
  • curbstone — A curbstone is one of the stones that form a curb.
  • cut above — to penetrate with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument or object: He cut his finger.
  • cybergoth — (uncountable) A subculture combining elements of goth and rave culture, typically involving energetic electronic music and brightly coloured, futuristic clothing.
  • datebooks — Plural form of datebook.
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