6-letter words containing y, e, b
- bleary — If your eyes are bleary, they look dull or tired, as if you have not had enough sleep or have drunk too much alcohol.
- blenny — any blennioid fish of the family Blenniidae of coastal waters, esp of the genus Blennius, having a tapering scaleless body, a long dorsal fin, and long raylike pelvic fins
- blimey — You say blimey when you are surprised by something or feel strongly about it.
- blooey — faulty; wrong; awry
- bluesy — If you describe a song or the way it is performed as bluesy, you mean that it is performed in a way that is characteristic of the blues.
- blythe — a female given name.
- bodley — George Frederick, 1827–1907, English architect.
- boleyn — Anne. 1507–36, second wife of Henry VIII of England; mother of Elizabeth I. She was executed on a charge of adultery
- bowery — a farm or plantation of an early Dutch settler of New York
- bowyer — a person who makes or sells archery bows
- boykie — a chap or fellow
- brayer — a roller used for spreading ink by hand
- bready — having the appearance or texture of bread
- breezy — If you describe someone as breezy, you mean that they behave in a casual, cheerful, and confident manner.
- breyer — Stephen (Gerald)1938- ; associate justice, U.S. Supreme Court (1994- )
- bridey — a female given name, form of Bridget.
- bugeye — a ketch-rigged sailing vessel used on Chesapeake Bay.
- buoyed — Nautical. a distinctively shaped and marked float, sometimes carrying a signal or signals, anchored to mark a channel, anchorage, navigational hazard, etc., or to provide a mooring place away from the shore.
- burley — a light thin-leaved tobacco, grown esp in Kentucky
- burney — Charles. 1726–1814, English composer and music historian, whose books include A General History of Music (1776–89)
- by ear — without reading from written music
- byelaw — a standing rule governing the regulation of a corporation's or society's internal affairs.
- bygone — Bygone means happening or existing a very long time ago.
- bylane — a side lane or alley off a road
- byline — A byline is a line at the top of an article in a newspaper or magazine giving the author's name.
- byname — a name that is additional to a person's main name, such as a surname
- byrnes — James Francis, 1879–1972, U.S. statesman and jurist: secretary of state 1945–47.
- byrnie — a coat of mail; hauberk.
- cybele — the Phrygian goddess of nature, mother of all living things and consort of Attis; identified with the Greek Rhea or Demeter
- cyber- — indicating computers
- cybers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cyber.
- daybed — a couch that can also be used as a bed
- debyes — Plural form of debye.
- derbys — Derbyshire
- dweeby — Like, or characteristic of, a dweeb; nerdy, uncool.
- ebayer — any person who buys or sells using the internet auction site, eBay
- embody — Be an expression of or give a tangible or visible form to (an idea, quality, or feeling).
- emboly — (biology) embolic invagination.
- embryo — An unborn or unhatched offspring in the process of development.
- embusy — to keep occupied
- eyebar — a metal bar with a hole or ring at each end, used in bridge construction
- feebly — physically weak, as from age or sickness; frail.
- get by — to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension.
- gombey — (music, Bermuda) A type of Afro-Bermudan folk music and dance tradition.
- hereby — by this, or the present, declaration, action, document, etc.; by means of this; as a result of this: I hereby resign as president of the class.
- kabyle — a member of a branch of the Berber people dwelling in NE Algeria.
- kebaya — A light, loose tunic worn by women in Malaysia, Indonesia, and other Southeast Asian countries.
- keyfob — Alternative spelling of key fob.
- khyber — (Cockney rhyming slang) arse.
- lie-by — a paved section alongside a highway for automobiles in need of emergency repairs.