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7-letter words containing b, e

  • barbell — A barbell is a long bar with adjustable weights on either side that people lift to strengthen their arm and shoulder muscles.
  • barbels — Plural form of barbel.
  • barbera — Joseph
  • barbers — Plural form of barber.
  • barbets — Plural form of barbet.
  • barbies — Plural form of barbie.
  • barbule — a very small barb
  • barcode — a machine-readable arrangement of numbers and parallel lines of different widths printed on a package, which can be electronically scanned at a checkout to register the price of the goods and to activate computer stock-checking and reordering
  • bardeen — John. 1908–91, US physicist and electrical engineer, noted for his research on electrical conduction in solids; shared Nobel prize for physics 1956 for research on semiconductors leading to the invention of the transistor; shared Nobel prize for physics 1972 for contributions to the theory of superconductivity
  • barefit — barefooted
  • bareish — Somewhat bare.
  • barents — Willem [wil-uh m] /ˈwɪl əm/ (Show IPA), died 1597, Dutch navigator and explorer.
  • barkeep — a barkeeper
  • barkers — Plural form of barker.
  • barkley — Alben William [al-buh n] /ˈæl bən/ (Show IPA), 1877–1956, vice president of the U.S. 1949–53.
  • barless — without a bar or bars
  • barline — A vertical line in musical notation indicating the start of a new bar.
  • barnave — Antoine Pierre. 1761–93, French revolutionary. A prominent member of the National Assembly, he was executed for his royalist sympathies
  • barnett — a male given name.
  • barneys — Plural form of barney.
  • baronet — A baronet is a man who has been made a knight. When a baronet dies, the title is passed on to his son.
  • baronne — baroness
  • baroque — Baroque architecture and art is an elaborate style of architecture and art that was popular in Europe in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.
  • barotse — a member of a Negroid people of central Africa living chiefly in SW Zambia
  • barques — Plural form of barque.
  • barrace — a barricade or barrier, particularly one in front of a castle or enclosing the grounds of a tournament
  • barrage — A barrage is continuous firing on an area with large guns and tanks.
  • barrels — Plural form of barrel.
  • barrens — (in North America) a stretch of usually level land that is sparsely vegetated or barren
  • barrera — the protecting wall enclosing the floor of a bull ring at bullfights
  • barrets — Plural form of barret.
  • barrettElizabeth, Browning, Elizabeth Barrett.
  • barrier — A barrier is something such as a rule, law, or policy that makes it difficult or impossible for something to happen or be achieved.
  • barries — Sir James M(atthew) 1860–1937, Scottish novelist, short-story writer, and playwright.
  • bartend — to work as a bartender
  • barters — Plural form of barter.
  • barthes — Roland. 1915–80, French writer and critic, who applied structuralist theory to literature and popular culture: his books include Mythologies (1957) and Elements of Semiology (1964)
  • barware — the glasses and other equipment used in a bar
  • barwise — (of a charge or charges) transversely across an escutcheon, in the manner of a bar.
  • barytes — a colourless or white mineral consisting of barium sulphate in orthorhombic crystalline form, occurring in sedimentary rocks and with sulphide ores: a source of barium. Formula: BaSO4
  • bascule — a bridge with a movable section hinged about a horizontal axis and counterbalanced by a weight
  • base 64 — (file format, algorithm)   A file format using 64 ASCII characters to encode the six bit binary data values 0-63. To convert data to base 64, the first byte is placed in the most significant eight bits of a 24-bit buffer, the next in the middle eight, and the third in the least significant eight bits. If there a fewer than three bytes to encode, the corresponding buffer bits will be zero. The buffer is then used, six bits at a time, most significant first, as indices into the string "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/" and the indicated character output. If there were only one or two input bytes, the output is padded with two or one "=" characters respectively. This prevents extra bits being added to the reconstructed data. The process then repeats on the remaining input data. Base 64 is used when transmitting binary data through text-only media such as electronic mail, and has largely replaced the older uuencode encoding.
  • baseman — a fielder positioned near a base
  • basemen — Plural form of baseman.
  • basenji — a small smooth-haired breed of dog of African origin having a tightly curled tail and an inability to bark
  • basescu — Traian. born 1951, Romanian politician, president of Romania (2004–14)
  • bashers — Plural form of basher.
  • basined — Enclosed in a basin.
  • basinet — a close-fitting medieval helmet of light steel usually with a visor
  • baskets — Plural form of basket.
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