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7-letter words containing b, e, o, g

  • albergo — (in Italy) a corporation of noble families typically formed to enable the success of business ventures
  • bagehot — Walter. 1826–77, English economist and journalist: editor of The Economist; author of The English Constitution (1867), Physics and Politics (1872), and Lombard Street (1873)
  • be good — do not misbehave
  • bedgown — a nightdress
  • beg off — to ask to be released from an engagement, obligation, etc
  • begloom — to make gloomy
  • begonia — A begonia is a garden plant which has large brightly coloured leaves.
  • begored — smeared with a sticky substance
  • begorra — an emphatic exclamation, regarded as a characteristic utterance of Irish people
  • begroan — to groan at or about
  • bendigo — a city in SE Australia, in central Victoria: founded in 1851 after the discovery of gold. Pop: 68 715 (2001)
  • beograd — Belgrade
  • bergamo — a walled city in N Italy, in Lombardy. Pop: 113 143 (2001)
  • bergson — Henri Louis (ɑ̃ri lwi). 1859–1941, French philosopher, who sought to bridge the gap between metaphysics and science. His main works are Memory and Matter (1896, trans. 1911) and Creative Evolution (1907, trans. 1911): Nobel prize for literature 1927
  • bettong — a species of rat kangaroo of Australia having a short nose
  • beyoglu — a district of Istanbul, north of the Golden Horn: the European quarter
  • big one — a thousand dollars
  • big toe — Your big toe is the largest toe on your foot.
  • bigoted — Someone who is bigoted has strong, unreasonable prejudices or opinions and will not change them, even when they are proved to be wrong.
  • biogeny — the evolutionary history of living organisms
  • blogger — a website containing a writer's or group of writers' own experiences, observations, opinions, etc., and often having images and links to other websites.
  • boatage — the act of hauling by boat.
  • 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)
  • bogbean — buckbean
  • boggled — to overwhelm or bewilder, as with the magnitude, complexity, or abnormality of: The speed of light boggles the mind.
  • boggler — a person who boggles, or a thing which causes one to boggle
  • bomberg — David. 1890–1957, British painter, noted esp for his landscapes
  • bondage — Bondage is the condition of being someone's property and having to work for them.
  • bonynge — Richard. born 1930, Australian conductor, esp of opera
  • bootleg — Bootleg is used to describe something that is made secretly and sold illegally.
  • boscage — a mass of trees and shrubs; thicket
  • boskage — a mass of trees or shrubs; wood, grove, or thicket.
  • bossage — stonework blocked out for later carving.
  • bottega — a workshop or studio, particularly that part used by a master artist's assistants or pupils
  • bottger — Johann Friedrich [yoh-hahn free-drikh] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1682–1719, German chemist.
  • boughed — having a bough or boughs (usually used in combination): golden-boughed elms.
  • bourges — a city in central France. Pop: 72 480 (1999)
  • bourget — a suburb of Paris: former airport, landing site for Charles A. Lindbergh, May 1927.
  • bowlegs — outward curvature of the legs causing a separation of the knees when the ankles are close or in contact.
  • broglie — Achille Charles Léonce Victor Duc de Broglie1785-1870; Fr. statesman under Napoleon I & Louis Philippe
  • brokage — brokerage.
  • buoyage — a system of buoys
  • burgeon — If something burgeons, it grows or develops rapidly.
  • bygones — past; gone by; earlier; former: The faded photograph brought memories of bygone days.
  • dogbane — any of several plants of the genus Apocynum, especially A. androsaemifolium, yielding an acrid milky juice and having an intensely bitter root.
  • dogbone — A bone shaped like an elongated barbell.
  • embargo — Impose an official ban on (trade or a country or commodity).
  • embogue — to disembogue
  • englobe — Enclose in or shape into a globe.
  • gamboge — Also, cambogia. a gum resin from various Asian trees of the genus Garcinia, especially G. hanburyi, used as a yellow pigment and as a cathartic.

On this page, we collect all 7-letter words with B-E-O-G. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 7-letter word that contains in B-E-O-G to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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