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9-letter words containing ri

  • boat trip — a trip in a boat
  • bonderize — to coat (steel) with an anticorrosive phosphate solution, usually in preparation for the application of paint, enamel, or lacquer.
  • bordering — the part or edge of a surface or area that forms its outer boundary.
  • boris iii — 1894–1943, king of Bulgaria 1918–43.
  • bothering — to give trouble to; annoy; pester; worry: His baby sister bothered him for candy.
  • bowstring — the string of an archer's bow, usually consisting of three strands of hemp
  • boyfriend — Someone's boyfriend is a man or boy with whom they are having a romantic or sexual relationship.
  • brasserie — A brasserie is a small and usually cheap restaurant or bar.
  • briarroot — the hard woody root of the briar, used for making tobacco pipes
  • briarwood — any of several woods used to make tobacco pipes
  • brick red — a reddish-brown colour
  • brickclay — any clay suitable for making bricks
  • brickkiln — a kiln or furnace in which bricks are baked or burned.
  • bricklike — resembling a brick
  • brickwork — You can refer to the bricks in the walls of a building as the brickwork.
  • brickyard — a place in which bricks are made, stored, or sold
  • bricolage — the jumbled effect produced by the close proximity of buildings from different periods and in different architectural styles
  • bridecake — a wedding cake
  • bridemaid — a bridesmaid
  • bridewell — a house of correction; jail, esp for minor offences
  • bridgeman — a person who works on a bridge or on the construction of bridges.
  • bridgeton — a city in SW New Jersey.
  • bridleway — A bridleway is the same as a bridle path.
  • briefcase — A briefcase is a case used for carrying documents in.
  • briefless — (said of a barrister) without clients
  • brierroot — brier2 (sense 2)
  • brierwood — brierroot
  • brigadier — A brigadier is a senior officer who is in charge of a brigade in the British armed forces.
  • brigading — a military unit having its own headquarters and consisting of two or more regiments, squadrons, groups, or battalions.
  • brighouse — a town in N England, in Calderdale unitary authority, West Yorkshire: machine tools, textiles, engineering. Pop: 32 360 (2001)
  • brightest — radiating or reflecting light; luminous; shining: The bright coins shone in the gloom.
  • brightish — fairly bright
  • brilliant — A brilliant person, idea, or performance is extremely clever or skilful.
  • brimfully — in a brimfull manner
  • brimstone — Brimstone is the same as sulphur.
  • brimstony — of, relating to or resembling brimstone; sulphurous
  • brineless — without brine
  • bring off — If you bring off something difficult, you do it successfully.
  • bring out — When a person or company brings out a new product, especially a new book or CD, they produce it and put it on sale.
  • bringdown — a disappointment
  • brinjarry — (in India) an itinerant grain and salt trader
  • briolette — a pear-shaped gem cut with long triangular facets
  • briquette — a small brick made of compressed coal dust, sawdust, charcoal, etc, used for fuel
  • briskness — quick and active; lively: brisk trading; a brisk walk.
  • bristling — Bristling means thick, hairy, and rough. It is used to describe things such as moustaches, beards, or eyebrows.
  • britannia — a female warrior carrying a trident and wearing a helmet, personifying Great Britain or the British Empire
  • britannic — of Britain; British (esp in the phrases His or Her Britannic Majesty)
  • briticism — a custom, linguistic usage, or other feature peculiar to Britain or its people
  • britisher — In American English or old-fashioned British English, British people are sometimes informally referred to as Britishers.
  • britishes — of or relating to Great Britain or its inhabitants.
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