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10-letter words containing e, a, r, n, i

  • bandoliers — Plural form of bandolier.
  • banffshire — (until 1975) a county of NE Scotland: formerly (1975–96) part of Grampian region, now part of Aberdeenshire
  • banistered — Simple past tense and past participle of banister.
  • bannisters — a baluster.
  • barbecuing — Present participle of barbecue.
  • bargainers — Plural form of bargainer.
  • barkantine — a sailing vessel having three or more masts, square-rigged on the foremast and fore-and-aft-rigged on the other masts.
  • barkentine — a sailing ship of three or more masts rigged square on the foremast and fore-and-aft on the others
  • baronetize — to make (someone) a baronet; confer a baronetcy upon.
  • barrelling — a cylindrical wooden container with slightly bulging sides made of staves hooped together, and with flat, parallel ends.
  • bartending — to serve or work as a bartender.
  • baseliners — Plural form of baseliner.
  • batterings — Plural form of battering.
  • bee martin — kingbird.
  • bellarmine — Saint Robert. 1542–1621, Italian Jesuit theologian and cardinal; an important influence during the Counter-Reformation
  • berecyntia — Cybele.
  • bering sea — a part of the N Pacific Ocean, between NE Siberia and Alaska. Area: about 2 275 000 sq km (878 000 sq miles)
  • berkeleian — denoting or relating to the philosophy of George Berkeley
  • bernardine — a monk of one of the reformed and stricter branches of the Cistercian order
  • bicornuate — Botany, Zoology. having two horns or hornlike parts.
  • bimaternal — having the genetic material of two mothers but no father
  • bioreagent — a reagent of biological origin, such as an enzyme
  • biparental — from two parents
  • birkenhead — a port in NW England, in Wirral unitary authority, Merseyside: former shipbuilding centre. Pop: 83 729 (2001)
  • birth name — the surname given a person at birth.
  • blabbering — to reveal indiscreetly and thoughtlessly: They blabbed my confidences to everyone.
  • blandisher — someone who blandishes
  • blathering — foolish, voluble talk: His speech was full of the most amazing blather.
  • boundaries — something that indicates bounds or limits; a limiting or bounding line.
  • bracketing — a set of brackets
  • brain cell — a nerve cell that is situated in the brain
  • brain stem — the portion of the brain that is continuous with the spinal cord and comprises the medulla oblongata, pons, midbrain, and parts of the hypothalamus, functioning in the control of reflexes and such essential internal mechanisms as respiration and heartbeat.
  • brain wave — any of the fluctuations of electrical potential in the brain as represented on an electroencephalogram. They vary in frequency from 1 to 30 hertz
  • brain-dead — If someone is declared brain-dead, they have suffered brain death.
  • brainpower — Brainpower is intelligence or the ability to think.
  • branchiate — having gills.
  • brandering — furring (def 4b).
  • brandished — to shake or wave, as a weapon; flourish: Brandishing his sword, he rode into battle.
  • brandywine — creek in SE Pa. & N Del.: site of a battle (1777) of the Revolutionary War, in which Washington's army failed to check the British advance on Philadelphia
  • brassiness — made of or covered with brass.
  • brattiness — the quality of being bratty
  • bread line — a line of people waiting to be given food as government relief or private charity
  • breadknife — a knife, usually with a serrated blade, used for cutting slices from a loaf of bread
  • break into — If someone breaks into a building, they get into it by force.
  • break wind — to emit wind from the anus
  • breakpoint — an instruction inserted by a debug program causing a return to the debug program
  • breathe in — When you breathe in, you take some air into your lungs.
  • brian reid — (person)   The person who cofounded Usenet's anarchic alt.* newsgroup hierarchy with John Gilmore.
  • brigandage — plundering by brigands
  • brigandine — a coat of mail, invented in the Middle Ages to increase mobility, consisting of metal rings or sheets sewn on to cloth or leather
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