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9-letter words containing l, b

  • assembler — An assembler is a person, a machine, or a company which assembles the individual parts of a vehicle or a piece of equipment such as a computer.
  • assembles — to bring together or gather into one place, company, body, or whole.
  • assumable — capable of being assumed, as an office or an obligation: Assumable mortgages are hard to find these days.
  • assumably — in a presumable manner
  • astrolabe — an instrument used by early astronomers to measure the altitude of stars and planets and also as a navigational aid. It consists of a graduated circular disc with a movable sighting device
  • asyllabic — not functioning in the manner of a syllable
  • atabalipa — Atahualpa.
  • attenable — Alternative form of attainable.
  • attleboro — a city in SE Massachusetts.
  • auditable — able to be audited
  • available — If something you want or need is available, you can find it or obtain it.
  • availably — suitable or ready for use; of use or service; at hand: I used whatever tools were available.
  • averrable — able to be proved or verified
  • avertable — Preventable.
  • avertible — Capable of being averted; preventable.
  • avoidable — Something that is avoidable can be prevented from happening.
  • avoidably — In a manner so as to be avoidable.
  • awardable — Capable of being awarded.
  • aylesbury — a town in SE central England, administrative centre of Buckinghamshire. Pop: 69 021 (2001)
  • b complex — vitamin B (complex)
  • b special — a member of a part-time largely Protestant police force formerly functioning in Northern Ireland
  • b-toolkit — (tool, programming, product)   A set of software tools designed to support a rigorous or formal development of software systems using the B-Method. The Toolkit also provides a development environment automating the management of all associated files, ensuring that the entire development, including code and documentation, is always in a consistent state. The Toolkit includes: a specification, design and code configuration management system, including integrity and dependency management and source file editing facilities; a set of software specification and design analysis tools, which includes syntax checkers, type checkers and a specification animator; a set of verification tools, which includes a proof-obligation generator and automatic and interactive provers; a set of coding tools, which includes a translator, linker, rapid prototyping facilities and a reusable specification/code module library; a documentation tool for automatically producing fully cross-referenced and indexed type-set documents from source files; a re-making tool for automatically re-checking and re-generating specifications, designs, code and documentation after modifications to source files. A normal licence costs 25,000 pounds, academic 6,250 pounds.
  • baal kore — an official in the synagogue, as a cantor, who reads the weekly portion of the Torah.
  • babelized — reduced to complete confusion or meaninglessness.
  • baby bell — one of the seven regional telephone companies formed after the breakup of the Bell system in 1983.
  • baby blue — a very light blue.
  • baby doll — a doll that looks like a baby
  • baby girl — a female baby
  • baby milk — a powder made from dried cows' milk, or other ingredients, mixed with water to feed babies
  • baby talk — Baby talk is the language used by babies when they are just learning to speak, or the way in which some adults speak when they are talking to babies.
  • baby-blue — in a pastel shade of blue
  • babyishly — in a baby-like fashion; childishly
  • babylonia — the southern kingdom of ancient Mesopotamia: a great empire from about 2200–538 bc, when it was conquered by the Persians
  • bacchanal — a follower of Bacchus
  • bacchical — Of or relating to Bacchus; hence, jovial, or riotous,with intoxication.
  • bachelors — Plural form of bachelor.
  • bachelour — Obsolete form of bachelor.
  • bacillary — of, relating to, or caused by bacilli
  • back link — (hypertext)   A link in one direction implied by the existence of an explicit link in the other direction.
  • back talk — If you refer to something that someone says as backtalk, you mean that it is rude or shows a lack of respect. You use backtalk especially to refer to things said by a child or by someone who is below you in rank or status.
  • back-heel — to strike the ball with one's heel and make it go behind one
  • back-load — to defer to a later date, as wages, benefits, or costs: The union agreed to back-load pay raises.
  • back-talk — an impudent response; impudence.
  • backblast — A dangerous blast of hot air behind a rocket or missile when it is fired.
  • backblock — (Australia, New Zealand, usually, in the plural) A residential area remote from major cities and lacking conveniences common in urban areas.
  • backcloth — A backcloth is a large piece of cloth, often with scenery or buildings painted on it, that is hung at the back of a stage while a play is being performed.
  • backfield — the area behind the line of scrimmage from which the backfield begin each play
  • backfiles — Plural form of backfile.
  • backfills — Plural form of backfill.
  • backflash — a flashback: Backflashes of the heroine's childhood fill in gaps in the novel's narrative.
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