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7-letter words containing u, b, e, r

  • rubasse — a variety of bright-red rock crystal.
  • rubbers — (in certain card games, as bridge and whist)
  • rubbery — like rubber; elastic; tough.
  • rubbles — broken bits and pieces of anything, as that which is demolished: Bombing reduced the town to rubble.
  • rubella — a usually mild contagious viral disease characterized by fever, mild upper respiratory congestion, and a fine red rash lasting a few days: if contracted by a woman during early pregnancy, it may cause serious damage to the fetus.
  • rubeola — measles.
  • rudesby — a rude person
  • rumbled — to make a deep, heavy, somewhat muffled, continuous sound, as thunder.
  • sabreur — someone who wields a sabre
  • scumber — to defecate
  • seaburySamuel, 1729–96, American clergyman: first bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church.
  • shubertLee (Levi Shubert) 1875–1953, and his brothers Sam S. 1876–1905, and Jacob J. 1880–1963, U.S. theatrical managers.
  • slubber — to perform hastily or carelessly.
  • slumber — to sleep, especially lightly; doze; drowse.
  • snubber — to treat with disdain or contempt, especially by ignoring.
  • stubber — a short projecting part.
  • subarea — a subsidiary area, field, study, or the like.
  • subduer — to conquer and bring into subjection: Rome subdued Gaul.
  • suberic — of or relating to cork.
  • suberin — a waxlike, fatty substance, occurring in cork cell walls and in or between other cells, that on alkaline hydrolysis yields chiefly suberic acid.
  • subrace — a subdivision of a race
  • subrent — to sublet or rent out (a property that is already rented
  • subrule — a principle or regulation governing conduct, action, procedure, arrangement, etc.: the rules of chess.
  • subsere — a secondary stage of ecological succession after a community is interfered with or destroyed by fire, flood, grazing, etc.; a secondary sere.
  • subter- — below, under, less than, secretly
  • subtler — thin, tenuous, or rarefied, as a fluid or an odor.
  • subvert — to overthrow (something established or existing).
  • subzero — indicating or recording lower than zero on some scale, especially on the Fahrenheit scale: a week of sub-zero temperatures.
  • surbase — a molding above a base, as that immediately above a baseboard, the crowning molding of a pedestal, etc.
  • surbate — to make (feet) sore through walking
  • terbium — a rare-earth, metallic element present in certain minerals and yielding colorless salts. Symbol: Tb; atomic number: 65; atomic weight: 158.924; specific gravity: 8.25.
  • the rub — an obstacle or difficulty (esp in the phrase there's the rub)
  • thumber — a hitchhiker.
  • thurber — James (Grover) [groh-ver] /ˈgroʊ vər/ (Show IPA), 1894–1961, U.S. writer, caricaturist, and illustrator.
  • traubelHelen, 1903–72, U.S. soprano.
  • tribune — a raised platform for a speaker; a dais, rostrum, or pulpit.
  • tribute — a gift, testimonial, compliment, or the like, given as due or in acknowledgment of gratitude or esteem.
  • trouble — to disturb the mental calm and contentment of; worry; distress; agitate.
  • tumbler — a person who performs leaps, somersaults, and other bodily feats.
  • tumbrel — one of the carts used during the French Revolution to convey victims to the guillotine.
  • turbine — any of various machines having a rotor, usually with vanes or blades, driven by the pressure, momentum, or reactive thrust of a moving fluid, as steam, water, hot gases, or air, either occurring in the form of free jets or as a fluid passing through and entirely filling a housing around the rotor.
  • uberaba — a city in E Brazil.
  • uberize — to subject (an industry) to a business model in which services are offered on demand through direct contact between a customer and a supplier, usually via mobile technology
  • uberous — fertile; abundant; fruitful
  • umberto — Humbert I.
  • umbrage — offense; annoyance; displeasure: to feel umbrage at a social snub; to give umbrage to someone; to take umbrage at someone's rudeness.
  • umbrere — (on armour) a helmet visor
  • umbriel — a moon of the planet Uranus.
  • unberth — Nautical. to allot to (a vessel) a certain space at which to anchor or tie up. to bring to or install in a berth, anchorage, or moorage: The captain had to berth the ship without the aid of tugboats.
  • unborne — not carried
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