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7-letter words containing b, e, a

  • babbage — Charles 1792–1871, English mathematician and inventor, who built a calculating machine that anticipated the modern electronic computer
  • babbies — Plural form of babby.
  • babbled — Simple past tense and past participle of babble.
  • babbler — a person who babbles
  • babbles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of babble.
  • babelic — an ancient city in the land of Shinar in which the building of a tower (Tower of Babel) intended to reach heaven was begun and the confusion of the language of the people took place. Gen. 11:4–9.
  • babesia — any of several species of parasite that affect humans and animals, esp Babesia bigemina, which causes fever in cattle
  • babette — a female given name, form of Barbara.
  • babiche — thongs or lacings of rawhide
  • babinet — Jacques (ʒɑk) 1794–1872, French physicist, noted for his work on the diffraction of light
  • baccate — like a berry in form, texture, etc
  • bacchae — the priestesses or female devotees of Bacchus
  • backare — an instruction to keep one's distance; back off!
  • backend — Alternative form of back end.
  • backers — Plural form of backer.
  • backhoe — A backhoe is a large vehicle which is used for moving large amounts of earth.
  • backset — a setback; a reversal
  • backsey — a sirloin
  • baconer — a pig that weighs between 83 and 101 kg, from which bacon is cut
  • bad egg — a bad person
  • badders — (UK, informal) badminton.
  • baddest — not good in any manner or degree.
  • baddies — a villainous or criminal person.
  • badgers — Plural form of badger.
  • badness — not good in any manner or degree.
  • baffies — slippers
  • baffled — lacking in understanding
  • baffler — Something that causes one to be baffled, particularly a difficult puzzle or riddle.
  • baffles — Plural form of baffle.
  • bagarre — a brawl, fight, scuffle
  • bagasse — the pulp remaining after the extraction of juice from sugar cane or similar plants: used as fuel and for making paper, etc
  • 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)
  • baggage — Your baggage consists of the bags that you take with you when you travel.
  • baggers — Plural form of bagger.
  • baggier — Comparative form of baggy.
  • baggies — (lowercase) Informal. any small bag or packet.
  • bagless — (esp of a vacuum cleaner) not containing a bag
  • baglike — resembling a bag
  • bagpipe — of or relating to the bagpipes
  • baguets — Plural form of baguet.
  • bailers — Plural form of bailer.
  • baileys — Plural form of bailey.
  • baillie — Dame Isobel. 1895–1983, British soprano
  • bainite — a mixture of iron and iron carbide found in incompletely hardened steels, produced when austenite is transformed at temperatures between the pearlite and martensite ranges
  • baiters — Plural form of baiter.
  • bake in — to include (a feature) as an integral part of a computer's operating system
  • bakeoff — a baking competition
  • baker's — a bakery or shop run by a baker selling bread and usually cakes, buns etc
  • balance — If you balance something somewhere, or if it balances there, it remains steady and does not fall.
  • baldest — Superlative form of bald.
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