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7-letter words containing d, e, a

  • 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.
  • baffled — lacking in understanding
  • baldest — Superlative form of bald.
  • baldies — a bald person (sometimes used as a facetious term of address).
  • ballade — a verse form consisting of three stanzas and an envoy, all ending with the same line. The first three stanzas commonly have eight or ten lines each and the same rhyme scheme
  • bandage — A bandage is a long strip of cloth which is wrapped around a wounded part of someone's body to protect or support it.
  • bandeau — a narrow band of ribbon, velvet, etc, worn round the head
  • banders — a thin, flat strip of some material for binding, confining, trimming, protecting, etc.: a band on each bunch of watercress.
  • bandied — to pass from one to another or back and forth; give and take; trade; exchange: to bandy blows; to bandy words.
  • bandies — to pass from one to another or back and forth; give and take; trade; exchange: to bandy blows; to bandy words.
  • bandlet — annulet (def 1).
  • bandore — a 16th-century plucked musical instrument resembling a lute but larger and fitted with seven pairs of metal strings
  • bangled — a rigid, ring-shaped bracelet usually made without a clasp so as to slip over the hand, but sometimes having a hinged opening and a clasp.
  • 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
  • bartend — to work as a bartender
  • basined — Enclosed in a basin.
  • basterd — Misspelling of bastard.
  • bastide — a large manor house in the south of France
  • batched — a quantity or number coming at one time or taken together: a batch of prisoners.
  • battled — Simple past tense and past participle of battle.
  • baulked — to stop, as at an obstacle, and refuse to proceed or to do something specified (usually followed by at): He balked at making the speech.
  • bawdier — Comparative form of bawdy.
  • bayside — On or near the shore of a bay.
  • beached — Having a beach.
  • beadeye — stonecat.
  • beadily — (of a look) in an avaricious or penetrating manner.
  • beading — Beading is a narrow strip of wood that is used for decorating or edging furniture and doors.
  • beadles — Plural form of beadle.
  • bearded — A bearded man has a beard.
  • bearden — Romare Howard [roh-mair] /ˈroʊ mɛər/ (Show IPA), 1911–88, U.S. artist.
  • beardie — a bearded collie
  • bed pad — a pad placed under the bottom sheet of a bed
  • bed tea — (in some Asian countries) tea served to a guest in bed in the morning
  • bedaubs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bedaub.
  • bedazed — Simple past tense and past participle of bedaze.
  • bedfast — bedridden
  • bedhead — A bedhead is a board which is fixed to the end of a bed behind your head.
  • bedlamp — a bedside light
  • bedlams — Plural form of bedlam.
  • bedload — (geology) Sediment that is carried along the bottom of a river or stream, rather than in the current.
  • bedmate — bedfellow (def 1).
  • bedpans — Plural form of bedpan.
  • bedrail — a rail or board along the side of a bed that connects the headboard with the footboard
  • bedrape — to drape, adorn
  • bedward — towards bed
  • bedwarf — to greatly hamper the growth of
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