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6-letter words containing bl

  • bumble — to speak or do in a clumsy, muddled, or inefficient way
  • burble — If something burbles, it makes a low continuous bubbling sound.
  • burbly — burbling
  • byblos — a major Phoenician city of the second millennium bc, in modern Lebanon
  • byblow — an incidental or accidental blow.
  • cabble — Metallurgy. to cut up (iron or steel bars) for fagoting.
  • cabled — Simple past tense and past participle of cable.
  • cabler — a cable broadcasting company
  • cables — Plural form of cable.
  • cablet — a small cable, esp a cable-laid rope that has a circumference of less than 25 centimetres (ten inches)
  • cobble — Cobbles are the same as cobblestones.
  • comble — the highest point of achievement or success in something
  • crible — dotted
  • dabble — If you dabble in something, you take part in it but not very seriously.
  • diable — a type of brown sauce, typically made with wine, shallots, vinegar, herbs, and black and/or cayenne pepper
  • diablo — Spanish for “devil.”.
  • dibble — a small hand tool used to make holes in the ground for planting or transplanting bulbs, seeds, or roots
  • dimble — (obsolete) A bower; a dingle.
  • doable — capable of being done.
  • doblin — Alfred [ahl-freyt] /ˈɑl freɪt/ (Show IPA), 1878–1957, German physician and novelist.
  • doblon — a former gold coin of Spain and Spanish America, equal to two gold escudos.
  • double — twice as large, heavy, strong, etc.; twofold in size, amount, number, extent, etc.: a double portion; a new house double the size of the old one.
  • doubly — to a double measure or degree: to be doubly cautious.
  • drably — dull; cheerless; lacking in spirit, brightness, etc.
  • dublet — Obsolete form of doublet.
  • dublinJohn, 1838–1918, U.S. Roman Catholic clergyman and social reformer, born in Ireland: archbishop of St. Paul, Minn., 1888–1918.
  • dumble — (UK, dialectal) A dale with a stream.
  • dumbly — lacking intelligence or good judgment; stupid; dull-witted.
  • edible — fit to be eaten as food; eatable; esculent.
  • elbląg — a port in N Poland: metallurgical industries. Pop: 129 000 (2005 est)
  • emblem — A heraldic device or symbolic object as a distinctive badge of a nation, organization, or family.
  • emblic — a deciduous tree, Phyllanthus emblica, found in eastern India and belonging to the family Euphorbiaceae, used for tanning
  • enable — Give (someone or something) the authority or means to do something.
  • fabled — celebrated in fables: a fabled goddess of the wood.
  • fabler — A writer of fables; a fabulist; a dealer in untruths or falsehoods.
  • fables — a short tale to teach a moral lesson, often with animals or inanimate objects as characters; apologue: the fable of the tortoise and the hare; Aesop's fables.
  • fablet — a large smartphone that is able to perform many of the functions of a tablet computer
  • fablon — a brand of adhesive-backed plastic material used to cover and decorate shelves, worktops, etc, and for handicraft purposes
  • famble — (obsolete, slang) A hand.
  • feeble — physically weak, as from age or sickness; frail.
  • feebly — physically weak, as from age or sickness; frail.
  • fimble — the male or staminate plant of hemp, which is harvested before the female or pistillate plant.
  • foible — a minor weakness or failing of character; slight flaw or defect: an all-too-human foible.
  • fumble — to feel or grope about clumsily: She fumbled in her purse for the keys.
  • gabble — to speak or converse rapidly and unintelligibly; jabber.
  • gabled — provided with a gable or gables: a gabled house.
  • gables — Plural form of gable.
  • gablet — a small gable
  • gamble — to play at any game of chance for money or other stakes.
  • garble — to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: to garble instructions.
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