6-letter words containing be
- tauber — Richard, 1892–1948, Austrian tenor, in England after 1940.
- thebes — a district in ancient Greece, NW of Athens. Capital: Thebes.
- thibet — Tibet (def 1).
- thisbe — Pyramus and Thisbe.
- timber — the wood of growing trees suitable for structural uses.
- tombed — an excavation in earth or rock for the burial of a corpse; grave.
- tumbes — a seaport in NW Peru.
- u-bend — pipe
- uberty — abundance; fruitfulness
- umbery — resembling umber in colour
- unbear — to release (a horse) from the bearing rein; to loosen the bearing rein on (a horse)
- unbelt — to remove the belt from.
- unbend — to straighten from a bent form or position.
- unbent — simple past tense and past participle of unbend.
- unrobe — to undress
- upbear — to bear up; raise aloft; sustain or support.
- upbeat — an unaccented beat, especially immediately preceding a downbeat.
- v-belt — A V-belt is a rubber belt used for driving mechanisms in an engine such as the fans or water pump.
- webbed — having the fingers or toes connected by a web or membrane: the webbed foot of a duck or beaver.
- webber — (obsolete) One who forms webs; a weaver.
- webern — Anton von [ahn-tohn fuh n] /ˈɑn toʊn fən/ (Show IPA), 1883–1945, Austrian composer.
- webers — Plural form of weber.
- wombed — Simple past tense and past participle of womb.
- xebecs — Plural form of xebec.
- yabber — jabber.
- zabeta — a tariff or tax
- zibets — Plural form of zibet.
- \begin — (text, chat) The LaTeX command used with \end to delimit an environment within which the text is formatted in a certain way. E.g. \begintable...\endtable. Used humorously in writing to indicate a context or to remark on the surrounded text. For example: \begin{flame} Predicate logic is the only good programming language. Anyone who would use anything else is an idiot. Also, all computers should be tredecimal instead of binary. \end{flame} Scribe users at CMU and elsewhere used to use @Begin/@End in an identical way (LaTeX was built to resemble Scribe). On Usenet, this construct would more frequently be rendered as "
" and " " (a la HTML), or "#ifdef FLAME" and "#endif FLAME" (a la C preprocessor).