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6-letter words that end in d

  • bildad — a friend of Job. Job 2:11.
  • bilked — to defraud; cheat: He bilked the government of almost a million dollars.
  • billed — having a bill or beak, especially one of a specified kind, shape, color, etc. (usually used in combination): a yellow-billed magpie.
  • birled — to pour (a drink) or pour a drink for.
  • bitted — Also called bollard. a strong post of wood or iron projecting, usually in pairs, above the deck of a ship, used for securing cables, lines for towing, etc.
  • bladed — having a blade or blades (often used in combination): a single-bladed leaf.
  • blamed — damned
  • blared — to emit a loud, raucous sound: The trumpets blared as the procession got under way.
  • blated — bleat.
  • blowed — a simple past tense and past participle of blow2 .
  • bobbed — If a woman's hair is bobbed, it is cut in a bob.
  • bodied — of or relating to the body; bodily.
  • bogard — to take an unfair share of (something); keep for oneself instead of sharing: Are you gonna bogart that joint all night?
  • bogged — wet, spongy ground with soil composed mainly of decayed vegetable matter.
  • boiled — that has been brought to boiling point
  • boland — an area of high altitude in S South Africa
  • bolted — equipped with a bolt or bolts
  • bombed — under the influence of alcohol or drugs (esp in the phrase bombed out of one's mind or skull)
  • bonded — A bonded company has entered into a legal agreement which offers its customers some protection if the company does not fulfil its contract with them.
  • boobed — a stupid person; fool; dunce.
  • boomed — to sail at full speed.
  • booted — wearing boots
  • boozed — If someone is boozed or boozed up, they are drunk.
  • borked — to attack (a candidate or public figure) systematically, especially in the media.
  • bossed — Botany, Zoology. a protuberance or roundish excrescence on the body or on some organ of an animal or plant.
  • boyard — Russian History. a member of the old nobility of Russia, before Peter the Great made rank dependent on state service.
  • braced — something that holds parts together or in place, as a clasp or clamp.
  • braird — the first shoots of grass or crops
  • braved — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
  • brewed — to make (beer, ale, etc.) by steeping, boiling, and fermenting malt and hops.
  • briand — Aristide (aristid). 1862–1932, French socialist statesman: prime minister of France 11 times. He was responsible for the separation of Church and State (1905) and he advocated a United States of Europe. Nobel peace prize 1926
  • briard — a medium-sized dog of an ancient French sheep-herding breed having a long rough coat of a single colour
  • brigid — Bridget2 (of Ireland)
  • browed — having a brow of a specified kind (usually used in combination): a shaggy-browed brute.
  • bruted — to shape (a diamond) by rubbing with another diamond or a diamond chip.
  • bucked — cheered up
  • budded — Botany. a small axillary or terminal protuberance on a plant, containing rudimentary foliage (leaf bud) the rudimentary inflorescence (flower bud) or both (mixed bud) an undeveloped or rudimentary stem or branch of a plant.
  • buffed — Chiefly British Dialect. a blow; slap.
  • bugged — Also called true bug, hemipteran, hemipteron. a hemipterous insect.
  • buhund — a medium-sized Norwegian spitz dog
  • bulbed — having a bulb or bulbs
  • bulged — a rounded projection, bend, or protruding part; protuberance; hump: a bulge in a wall.
  • bulled — the male of a bovine animal, especially of the genus Bos, with sexual organs intact and capable of reproduction.
  • bummed — depressed, upset, distressed, annoyed, etc.
  • bunged — a stopper for the opening of a cask.
  • buoyed — Nautical. a distinctively shaped and marked float, sometimes carrying a signal or signals, anchored to mark a channel, anchorage, navigational hazard, etc., or to provide a mooring place away from the shore.
  • buried — to put in the ground and cover with earth: The pirates buried the chest on the island.
  • burked — to murder, as by suffocation, so as to leave no or few marks of violence.
  • burled — having burls that produce a distorted grain: burled lumber.
  • burned — having been cheated in a sale of drugs
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