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7-letter words containing bl

  • bluffer — good-naturedly direct, blunt, or frank; heartily outspoken: a big, bluff, generous man.
  • blunden — Edmund (Charles). 1896–1974, British poet and scholar, noted esp for Undertones of War (1928), a memoir of World War I in verse and prose
  • blunder — A blunder is a stupid or careless mistake.
  • blunger — a large vat in which the contents, esp clay and water, are mixed by rotating arms
  • blunker — a person who prints cloths
  • blunted — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • blunter — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • bluntly — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • blurgle — /bler'gl/ [Great Britain] Spoken metasyntactic variable, to indicate some text that is obvious from context, or which is already known. If several words are to be replaced, blurgle may well be doubled or trebled. "To look for something in several files use "grep string blurgle blurgle"." In each case, "blurgle blurgle" would be understood to be replaced by the file you wished to search. Compare mumble.
  • blurred — to obscure or sully (something) by smearing or with a smeary substance: The windows were blurred with soot.
  • blurted — to utter suddenly or inadvertently; divulge impulsively or unadvisedly (usually followed by out): He blurted out the hiding place of the spy.
  • blurter — a person who blurts
  • blusher — Blusher is a coloured substance that women put on their cheeks.
  • blushet — a modest young woman, perceived as prone to blushing
  • bluster — If you say that someone is blustering, you mean that they are speaking aggressively but without authority, often because they are angry or offended.
  • bomblet — one of a number of small bombs contained in a larger bomb
  • brabble — to quarrel noisily over trifles
  • bramble — Brambles are wild prickly bushes that produce blackberries.
  • brambly — having or resembling brambles.
  • bubbler — a drinking fountain in which the water is forced in a stream from a small vertical nozzle
  • bulblet — a small bulb or bulblike structure, especially one growing in the axils of leaves, as in the tiger lily, or replacing flowers, as in the onion.
  • bumbler — to bungle or blunder awkwardly; muddle: He somehow bumbled through two years of college.
  • buyable — available to be bought
  • by-blow — a passing or incidental blow
  • cablets — Plural form of cablet.
  • cabling — Cabling is used to refer to electrical or electronic cables, or to the process of putting them in a place.
  • capable — If a person or thing is capable of doing something, they have the ability to do it.
  • capably — having power and ability; efficient; competent: a capable instructor.
  • chablis — a dry white burgundy wine made around Chablis, in central France
  • chambly — a city in S Quebec, in E Canada.
  • chumble — To peck at or nibble.
  • citable — to quote (a passage, book, author, etc.), especially as an authority: He cited the Constitution in his defense.
  • cobbled — A cobbled street has a surface made of cobblestones.
  • cobbler — A cobbler is a person whose job is to make or mend shoes.
  • cobbles — coal in small rounded lumps
  • coblenz — Koblenz
  • codable — capable of being coded
  • cribble — a sieve
  • crumble — If something crumbles, or if you crumble it, it breaks into a lot of small pieces.
  • crumbly — Something that is crumbly is easily broken into a lot of little pieces.
  • cubless — having no cubs
  • curable — If a disease or illness is curable, it can be cured.
  • curably — In a curable manner.
  • dabbled — to play and splash in or as if in water, especially with the hands.
  • dabbler — to play and splash in or as if in water, especially with the hands.
  • dabbles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dabble.
  • datable — Able to be dated to a particular time.
  • deblock — (computing) To separate the logical records that have been combined into a physical block for storage.
  • delible — able to be deleted
  • delibly — In a delible way.
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