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7-letter words containing b, e, a, u

  • bear up — If you bear up when experiencing problems, you remain cheerful and show courage in spite of them.
  • bearhug — to give someone a bear hug
  • beat up — If someone beats a person up, they hit or kick the person many times.
  • beat-up — Informal. dilapidated; in poor condition from use: a beat-up old jalopy.
  • beauish — vain and showy
  • beautie — Obsolete spelling of beauty.
  • because — You use because when stating the reason for something.
  • becuase — Misspelling of because.
  • bedaubs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bedaub.
  • belarus — a republic in E Europe; part of the medieval Lithuanian and Polish empires before being occupied by Russia; a Soviet republic (1919–91); in 1997 formed a close political and economic union with Russia: mainly low-lying and forested. Languages: Belarussian; Russian. Religion: believers are mostly Christian. Currency: rouble. Capital: Minsk. Pop: 9 625 888 (2013 est). Area: 207 600 sq km (80 134 sq miles)
  • belgaum — a city in India, in Karnataka: cotton, furniture, leather. Pop: 399 600 (2001)
  • belukha — a twin-peaked mountain in S central Russia, near the border of Kazakhstan: highest peak in the Altai Mountains. 15,157 feet (4620 meters).
  • berceau — an arched trellis for climbing plants
  • bermuda — a UK Overseas Territory consisting of a group of over 150 coral islands (the Bermudas) in the NW Atlantic: discovered in about 1503, colonized by the British by 1612, although not acquired by the British crown until 1684. Capital: Hamilton. Pop: 69 467 (2013 est). Area: 53 sq km (20 sq miles)
  • besague — a plate protecting an open area, as at the elbow or armpit.
  • bleaunt — a short tunic or blouse, worn in the Middle Ages.
  • bluejay — a common North American jay, Cyanocitta cristata, having bright blue plumage with greyish-white underparts
  • boileau — Nicolas (nikɔlɑ). full name Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux. 1636–1711, French poet and critic; author of satires, epistles, and L'Art poétique (1674), in which he laid down the basic principles of French classical literature
  • boutade — an outburst; sally
  • braudel — ˈFernand Paul (fɛʀˈnɑ̃ pɔl) ; fernänˈ p^ōl) 1902-85; Fr. historian
  • bravure — Music. a florid passage or piece requiring great skill and spirit in the performer.
  • breakup — The breakup of a marriage, relationship, or association is the act of it finishing or coming to an end because the people involved decide that it is not working successfully.
  • breslau — Wrocław
  • bugayev — Boris Nikolayevich [bawr-is nik-uh-lahy-uh-vich,, bohr-,, bor-;; Russian buh-ryees nyi-kuh-lah-yi-vyich] /ˈbɔr ɪs ˌnɪk əˈlaɪ ə vɪtʃ,, ˈboʊr-,, ˌbɒr-;; Russian bʌˈryis nyɪ kʌˈlɑ yɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), Bely, Andrei.
  • bugbane — any of several ranunculaceous plants of the genus Cimicifuga, esp C. foetida of Europe, whose flowers are reputed to repel insects
  • bugbear — Something or someone that is your bugbear worries or upsets you.
  • bukkake — a sexual practice in which several men ejaculate on the face of an individual woman
  • bulkage — any agent that aids peristalsis by increasing the bulk of material in the intestine
  • bullace — a small Eurasian rosaceous tree, Prunus domestica insititia (or P. insititia), of which the damson is the cultivated form
  • bullate — puckered or blistered in appearance
  • bumbaze — to confuse; bewilder
  • bumelia — a thorny shrub of the genus Bumelia
  • buoyage — a system of buoys
  • burbage — James. ?1530–97, English actor and theatre manager, who built (1576) the first theatre in England
  • bureaux — Bureaux is a plural form of bureau.
  • burgage — (in England) tenure of land or tenement in a town or city, which originally involved a fixed money rent
  • bursate — resembling or containing a bursa
  • bursera — of or relating to the Bursera genus of gum trees
  • buyable — available to be bought
  • cimabue — Giovanni (dʒoˈvanni). ?1240–?1302, Italian painter of the Florentine school, who anticipated the movement, led by Giotto, away from the Byzantine tradition in art towards a greater naturalism
  • cluebat — (computing slang) A bat (club) with which someone clueless is (figuratively or in one's imagination) struck.
  • corbeau — a blackish green colour
  • cubbena — (formerly, especially in creole-speaking cultures) a name given at birth to a black child, in accordance with African customs, indicating the child's sex and the day of the week on which he or she was born, as the male and female names for Sunday (Quashee and Quasheba) Monday (Cudjo or Cudjoe and Juba) Tuesday (Cubbena and Beneba) Wednesday (Quaco and Cuba or Cubba) Thursday (Quao and Abba) Friday (Cuffee or Cuffy and Pheba or Phibbi) and Saturday (Quamin or Quame and Mimba)
  • cudbear — a purple dye prepared from lichens
  • cueball — the ball a player strikes with the cue, as distinguished from the other balls on the table.
  • curable — If a disease or illness is curable, it can be cured.
  • daubers — Plural form of dauber.
  • daubery — the act or an instance of daubing
  • debauch — to lead into a life of depraved self-indulgence
  • dupable — a person who is easily deceived or fooled; gull.
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