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7-letter words containing b, e, d

  • blinded — unable to see; lacking the sense of sight; sightless: a blind man.
  • blinder — If you say that someone such as a sports player or musician has played a blinder, you are emphasizing that they have played something very well.
  • blinked — to open and close the eye, especially involuntarily; wink rapidly and repeatedly.
  • blitzed — inebriated; drunk
  • bloated — If someone's body or a part of their body is bloated, it is much larger than normal, usually because it has a lot of liquid or gas inside it.
  • blocked — If something is blocked or blocked up, it is completely closed so that nothing can get through it.
  • blondel — François [frahn-swa] /frɑ̃ˈswa/ (Show IPA), (Sieur des Croisettes) 1618–86, French architect.
  • blonder — (of a woman or girl) having fair hair and usually fair skin and light eyes.
  • blondie — Informal. a blond person: All the children were blondies.
  • blooded — (of horses, cattle, etc) of good breeding
  • bloomed — (of a lens) coated with a thin film of magnesium fluoride or some other substance to reduce the amount of light lost by reflection
  • blotted — a spot or stain, especially of ink on paper.
  • bludger — a person who scrounges
  • 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.
  • blunted — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • 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.
  • boarded — a piece of wood sawed thin, and of considerable length and breadth compared with the thickness.
  • boarder — A boarder is a pupil who lives at school during the term.
  • boasted — to speak with exaggeration and excessive pride, especially about oneself.
  • bobsled — A bobsled is the same as a bobsleigh.
  • bockedy — (of a structure, piece of furniture, etc) unsteady
  • bodeful — portentous, foreboding, ominous
  • bogarde — Sir Dirk, real name Derek Jules Gaspard Ulric Niven van den Bogaerde. 1920–99, British film actor and writer: his films include The Servant (1963) and Death in Venice (1970). His writings include the autobiographical A Postillion Struck by Lightning (1977) and the novel A Period of Adjustment (1994)
  • boggled — to overwhelm or bewilder, as with the magnitude, complexity, or abnormality of: The speed of light boggles the mind.
  • boldest — not hesitating or fearful in the face of actual or possible danger or rebuff; courageous and daring: a bold hero.
  • bolixed — to do (something) badly; bungle (often followed by up): His interference bollixed up the whole deal.
  • bondage — Bondage is the condition of being someone's property and having to work for them.
  • bondmen — a male slave.
  • boodler — a person involved in bribery or corruption
  • bookend — Bookends are a pair of supports used to hold a row of books in an upright position by placing one at each end of the row.
  • borders — administrative division of S Scotland, on the English border: 1,800 sq mi (4,662 sq km); pop. 101,000
  • bordure — the outer edge of a shield, esp when decorated distinctively
  • boredom — Boredom is the state of being bored.
  • bosomed — having a (specified kind of) bosom
  • botched — bungled or mishandled
  • bottled — Bottled gas is kept under pressure in special metal cylinders which can be moved from one place to another.
  • boughed — having a bough or boughs (usually used in combination): golden-boughed elms.
  • boulder — A boulder is a large rounded rock.
  • bounded — (of a set) having a bound, esp where a measure is defined in terms of which all the elements of the set, or the differences between all pairs of members, are less than some value, or else all its members lie within some other well-defined set
  • bounden — morally obligatory (archaic except in the phrase bounden duty)
  • bounder — If you call a man a bounder, you mean he behaves in an unkind, deceitful, or selfish way.
  • bourder — a person who jests or jokes
  • boutade — an outburst; sally
  • bowhead — a large-mouthed arctic whale, Balaena mysticetus, that has become rare through overfishing but is now a protected species
  • bowlder — boulder
  • box bed — a bed completely enclosed so as to resemble a box.
  • boxhead — a heading, usually atthe top of a page, newspaper column, or column of figures, enclosed in a box formed by rules.
  • bradded — having brads.
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