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7-letter words containing ur

  • burgher — The burghers of a town or city are the people who live there, especially the richer or more respectable people.
  • burglar — A burglar is a thief who enters a house or other building by force.
  • burke'sMartha Jane, 1852?–1903, Calamity Jane.
  • burking — to murder, as by suffocation, so as to leave no or few marks of violence.
  • burkini — a swimming costume which covers the whole body with the exception of the face, hands, and feet, suitable for wear by Muslim women
  • burkite — burker; murderer
  • burlesk — a bawdy comedy show of the late 19th and early 20th centuries: the striptease eventually became one of its chief elements
  • burlily — in burly fashion
  • burmese — Burmese means belonging or relating to Burma, or to its people, language, or culture. Burma is now known as Myanmar.
  • burn in — to darken (areas on a photographic print) by exposing them to light while masking other regions
  • burn up — If something burns up or if fire burns it up, it is completely destroyed by fire or strong heat.
  • burn-in — 1.   (hardware)   screen saver. 2.   (hardware, testing)   burn-in period.
  • burnaby — city in SW British Columbia, Canada; suburb of Vancouver: pop. 179,000
  • burnett — Frances Hodgson (ˈhɒdʒsən). 1849–1924, US novelist, born in England; author of Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886) and The Secret Garden (1911)
  • burnhamDaniel Hudson, 1846–1912, U.S. architect and city planner.
  • burning — You use burning to describe something that is extremely hot.
  • burnish — To burnish the image of someone or something means to improve their image.
  • burnley — an industrial town in NW England, in E Lancashire. Pop: 73 021 (2001)
  • burnous — a long circular cloak with a hood attached, worn esp by Arabs
  • burnout — If someone suffers burnout, they exhaust themselves at an early stage in their life or career because they have achieved too much too quickly.
  • burrell — Paul. born 1958, British butler and confidant to Diana, Princess of Wales. After her death he was charged with but (2003) acquitted of stealing from her estate. His book, A Royal Duty (2003), revealed intimate details of her life
  • burrhel — a wild sheep, Pseudois nahoor, of Tibet and adjacent mountainous regions, having goatlike horns that curve backward.
  • burring — a pronunciation of the r- sound as a uvular trill, as in certain Northern English dialects.
  • burrito — A burrito is a tortilla containing a filling of ground beef, chicken, cheese, or beans.
  • bursary — A bursary is a sum of money which is given to someone to allow them to study in a college or university.
  • bursate — resembling or containing a bursa
  • burseed — a plant, Lapulla echinata, with adhesive seeds
  • bursera — of or relating to the Bursera genus of gum trees
  • bursted — to break, break open, or fly apart with sudden violence: The bitter cold caused the pipes to burst.
  • burster — a person or thing that bursts.
  • burthen — burden1
  • burundi — a republic in E central Africa: inhabited chiefly by the Hutu, Tutsi, and Twa (Pygmy); made part of German East Africa in 1899; part of the Belgian territory of Ruanda-Urundi from 1923 until it became independent in 1962; ethnic violence has erupted at times between Hutu and Tutsi, as in Rwanda; consists mainly of high plateaus along the main Nile-Congo dividing range, dropping rapidly to the Great Rift Valley in the west. Official languages: Kirundi and French. Religion: Christian majority. Currency: Burundi franc. Capital: Bujumbura. Pop: 10 888 321 (2013 est). Area: 27 731 sq km (10 707 sq miles)
  • burweed — any of various plants that bear burs, such as the burdock
  • cadbury — George. 1839–1922, British Quaker industrialist and philanthropist. He established, with his brother Richard Cadbury (1835–99), the chocolate-making company Cadbury Brothers and the garden village Bournville, near Birmingham, for their workers
  • caesura — (in modern prosody) a pause, esp for sense, usually near the middle of a verse line
  • camauro — a crimson velvet cap trimmed with ermine, worn by the pope on nonliturgical occasions.
  • candour — Candour is the quality of speaking honestly and openly about things.
  • capture — If you capture someone or something, you catch them, especially in a war.
  • censure — If you censure someone for something that they have done, you tell them that you strongly disapprove of it.
  • centaur — In classical mythology, a centaur is a creature with the head, arms, and upper body of a man, and the body and legs of a horse.
  • century — A century is a period of a hundred years that is used when stating a date. For example, the 19th century was the period from 1801 to 1900.
  • churban — the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem, first by the Babylonians in 587 bc and again by the Romans in 70 ad
  • churchy — like a church, church service, etc
  • churned — a container or machine in which cream or milk is agitated to make butter.
  • churner — a container or machine in which cream or milk is agitated to make butter.
  • churred — Simple past tense and past participle of churr.
  • churros — Plural form of churro.
  • churrus — hemp resin used as an intoxicating drug
  • clamour — If people are clamouring for something, they are demanding it in a noisy or angry way.
  • cliburnVan [van] /væn/ (Show IPA), (Harvey Lavan Cliburn, Jr) 1934–2013, U.S. pianist.
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