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6-letter words containing a, b, r

  • bandar — a male monkey
  • bander — someone who joins a band or league
  • banger — Bangers are sausages.
  • bangor — a university town in NW Wales, in Gwynedd, on the Menai Strait. Pop: 15 280 (2001)
  • banker — A banker is someone who works in banking at a senior level.
  • banner — A banner is a long strip of cloth with something written on it. Banners are usually attached to two poles and carried during a protest or rally.
  • banter — Banter is teasing or joking talk that is amusing and friendly.
  • baraat — (South Asia) A wedding procession carried out by the bridegroom in north India and Pakistan.
  • baraka — Imamu Amiri [ih-mah-moo uh-meer-ee] /ɪˈmɑ mu əˈmɪər i/ (Show IPA), (Everett LeRoi Jones) 1934–2014, U.S. dramatist, poet, and political activist.
  • barang — Lb Philippines black magic; sorcery.
  • barany — Robert. 1876–1936, Austrian physician; devised the Bárány test, which detects diseases of the semicircular canals of the inner ear: Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1914
  • baraza — a place where public meetings are held
  • barbal — relating to a beard
  • barbed — A barbed remark or joke seems polite or humorous, but contains a cleverly hidden criticism.
  • barbel — any of several slender tactile spines or bristles that hang from the jaws of certain fishes, such as the catfish and carp
  • barber — A barber is a man whose job is cutting men's hair.
  • barbet — any small tropical brightly coloured bird of the family Capitonidae, having short weak wings and a sharp stout bill with tuftlike feathers at its base: order Piciformes (woodpeckers, etc)
  • barbie — A barbie is a barbecue.
  • barble — Obsolete form of barbel.
  • barbre — (obsolete) barbarian.
  • barbut — an open-faced Italian helmet made from one piece of metal and reaching the shoulders
  • barcan — an ancient Carthaginian family to which Hamilcar, Hasdrubal, and Hannibal belonged.
  • barded — Armor. any of various pieces of defensive armor for a horse.
  • bardee — bardy2 .
  • bardic — (formerly) a person who composed and recited epic or heroic poems, often while playing the harp, lyre, or the like.
  • bardie — an edible white wood-boring grub of Australia
  • bardot — Brigitte (briʒit). born 1934, French film actress and animal rights activist
  • barege — light silky gauze fabric made of wool
  • barely — You use barely to say that something is only just true or only just the case.
  • barens — Plural form of baren.
  • barest — without covering or clothing; naked; nude: bare legs.
  • barfed — Simple past tense and past participle of barf.
  • barfly — A barfly is a person who spends a lot of time drinking in bars
  • barful — presenting difficulties or obstacles
  • barged — a capacious, flat-bottomed vessel, usually intended to be pushed or towed, for transporting freight or passengers; lighter.
  • bargee — a person employed on or in charge of a barge
  • barger — (obsolete) The manager of a barge.
  • barges — Plural form of barge.
  • barhop — to visit several bars in succession
  • barian — (mineralogy) Describing minerals that contain barium.
  • baring — Evelyn, 1st Earl of Cromer. 1841–1917, English administrator. As consul general in Egypt with plenipotentiary powers, he controlled the Egyptian government from 1883 to 1907
  • barish — quite thinly covered or bare
  • barit. — baritone
  • barite — a colourless or white mineral consisting of barium sulphate in orthorhombic crystalline form, occurring in sedimentary rocks and with sulphide ores: a source of barium. Formula: BaSO4
  • barium — Barium is a soft, silvery-white metal.
  • barked — the external covering of the woody stems, branches, and roots of plants, as distinct and separable from the wood itself.
  • barken — consisting of bark
  • barker — an animal or person that barks
  • barkla — Charles Glover. 1877–1944, British physicist, noted for his work on X-rays: Nobel prize for physics 1917
  • barley — Barley is a grain that is used to make food, beer, and whisky.
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