10-letter words containing b, i, t, e, d
- breadfruit — Breadfruit are large round fruit that grow on trees in the Pacific Islands and in tropical parts of America and that, when baked, look and feel like bread.
- breadstick — bread baked in a long thin crisp stick
- brecciated — Petrology. to form as breccia.
- bridgeport — a port in SW Connecticut, on Long Island Sound. Pop: 139 664 (2003 est)
- bridgetalk — (language) A visual language.
- bridgetown — the capital of Barbados, a port on the SW coast. Pop: 144 000 (2005 est)
- bridgetree — a beam supporting the shaft on which an upper millstone rotates.
- bridgwater — a town in SW England, in central Somerset. Pop: 36 563 (2001)
- bulletined — a brief account or statement, as of news or events, issued for the information of the public.
- calibrated — marked with units
- coatbridge — an industrial town in central Scotland, in North Lanarkshire. Pop: 41 170 (2001)
- counterbid — A counterbid is a bid that is made in response to a bid from another person or group, offering the seller more advantages.
- creditable — A creditable performance or achievement is of a reasonably high standard.
- creditably — bringing or deserving credit, honor, reputation, or esteem.
- crib death — Crib death is the sudden death of a baby while it is asleep, although the baby had not previously been ill.
- dagobert i — a.d. 602?–639, Merovingian king of the Franks 628–639.
- dealbation — the process of bleaching or making white
- debatingly — in an argumentative manner
- debilitate — If you are debilitated by something such as an illness, it causes your body or mind to become gradually weaker.
- debilities — Plural form of debility.
- debit card — A debit card is a bank card that you can use to pay for things. When you use it the money is taken out of your bank account immediately.
- debit side — The debit side of an account is the left-hand side.
- debt issue — a fixed corporate obligation, as a bond or debenture.
- debt limit — (in public finance) the legal maximum debt permitted a municipal, state, or national government.
- decembrist — a participant in the unsuccessful revolt against Tsar Nicolas I in Dec 1825
- deceptible — capable of being deceived
- decoctible — capable of being decocted
- deductible — If a payment or expense is deductible, it can be deducted from another sum such as your income, for example, when calculating how much income tax you have to pay.
- defectible — having the ability to fail
- delibation — a small taste of a liquid
- deliberate — If you do something that is deliberate, you planned or decided to do it beforehand, and so it happens on purpose rather than by chance.
- demob suit — a suit of civilian clothes issued to a demobilized soldier, esp at the end of World War II
- describent — (geometry) A generatrix.
- detainable — to keep from proceeding; keep waiting; delay.
- detectible — to discover or catch (a person) in the performance of some act: to detect someone cheating.
- diabetical — relating to diabetes
- digestable — (obsolete, or, nonstandard) alt form digestible.
- digestible — capable of being digested; readily digested.
- directable — to manage or guide by advice, helpful information, instruction, etc.: He directed the company through a difficult time.
- disbarment — to expel from the legal profession or from the bar of a particular court.
- disbenefit — Anything disadvantageous.
- disburthen — (obsolete) disburden.
- disputable — capable of being disputed; debatable; questionable.
- distribute — to divide and give out in shares; deal out; allot.
- distrouble — to trouble; to interrupt
- dive table — Often, dive tables. a numerical table used by scuba divers to determine time limits of dives, according to depth, as well as possible decompression delays during ascent and requisite surface intervals between dives.
- divertible — to turn aside or from a path or course; deflect.
- divestible — capable of being divested, as an estate in land.
- drift tube — a conducting enclosure, usually cylindrical, held at a constant potential so that electrons or charged particles within will experience no force, and therefore no change in velocity. Compare Klystron.
- dubitative — doubting; doubtful.