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5-letter words containing e, b, a

  • bagel — A bagel is a ring-shaped bread roll.
  • bagie — a turnip
  • bague — (architecture) The annular moulding or group of mouldings dividing a long shaft or clustered column into two or more parts.
  • baiae — an ancient resort city in SW Italy, near Naples: villas of Caesar, Nero, and Pompey.
  • baile — (in the southwestern US and parts of Central and South America) a gathering for dancing.
  • baire — mosquito net.
  • baize — Baize is a thick woollen material which is used for covering tables on which games such as cards and snooker are played.
  • bajer — Fredrik [fred-rik;; Danish frith -rik] /ˈfrɛd rɪk;; Danish ˈfrɪð rɪk/ (Show IPA), 1837–1922, Danish politician and author: Nobel Peace Prize 1908.
  • baked — to cook by dry heat in an oven or on heated metal or stones.
  • baker — A baker is a person whose job is to bake and sell bread, pastries, and cakes.
  • bakes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bake.
  • baled — Also, bailer. a bucket, dipper, or other container used for bailing.
  • baler — an agricultural machine for making bales of hay, etc
  • bales — Also, bailer. a bucket, dipper, or other container used for bailing.
  • baned — Simple past tense and past participle of bane.
  • banes — a person or thing that ruins or spoils: Gambling was the bane of his existence.
  • banke — Obsolete spelling of bank.
  • barbe — a Waldensian missionary
  • barde — Armor. any of various pieces of defensive armor for a horse.
  • barea — Arturo [ahr-too r-oh;; Spanish ahr-too-raw] /ɑrˈtʊər oʊ;; Spanish ɑrˈtu rɔ/ (Show IPA), 1897–1957, Spanish author, critic, lecturer, and broadcaster: in England after 1939.
  • bared — without covering or clothing; naked; nude: bare legs.
  • baren — A tool for pressing woodcuts, consisting of a disk with a coil of string glued to one side, covered with a smooth sheet.
  • barer — without covering or clothing; naked; nude: bare legs.
  • bares — without covering or clothing; naked; nude: bare legs.
  • barge — A barge is a long, narrow boat with a flat bottom. Barges are used for carrying heavy loads, especially on canals.
  • barke — Obsolete spelling of bark.
  • barre — a rail at hip height used for ballet practice and leg exercises
  • barye — a unit of pressure in the cgs system equal to 1 dyne per square centimetre. 1 barye is equivalent to 1 microbar
  • based — If you are based in a particular place, that is the place where you live or do most of your work. See also base.
  • basel — city in NW Switzerland, on the Rhine: pop. 180,000
  • baser — Music Obsolete. bass1 (defs 3, 4).
  • bases — Bases is the plural of base.
  • basie — William, known as Count Basie. 1904–84, US jazz pianist, bandleader, and composer: associated particularly with the polished phrasing and style of big-band jazz
  • basle — a canton of NW Switzerland, divided into the demicantons of Basle-Landschaft and Basle-Stadt. Pops.: 263 200 and 186 900 (2002 est). Areas: 427 sq km (165 sq miles) and 36 sq km (14 sq miles) respectively
  • baste — If you baste meat, you pour hot fat and the juices from the meat itself over it while it is cooking.
  • bated — (of breath) held
  • bates — Sir Alan (Arthur). 1934–2003, British film and stage actor. His films include A Kind of Loving (1962), Women in Love (1969), The Go-Between (1971), and The Cherry Orchard (1999)
  • bathe — If you bathe in a sea, river, or lake, you swim, play, or wash yourself in it. Birds and animals can also bathe.
  • bauer — Georg [gey-awrk] /geɪˈɔrk/ (Show IPA), Agricola, Georgius.
  • baume — designating or of either of two hydrometer scales used to indicate specific gravity
  • bayed — a deep, prolonged howl, as of a hound on the scent.
  • bayer — reddish brown.
  • bayle — Pierre (pjɛr). 1647–1706, French philosopher and critic, noted for his Dictionnaire historique et critique (1697), which profoundly influenced Voltaire and the French Encyclopedists
  • bayze — Obsolete form of baize.
  • beach — A beach is an area of sand or stones beside the sea.
  • beads — a necklace
  • beady — Beady eyes are small, round, and bright.
  • beaks — Plural form of beak.
  • beaky — having a large beak
  • beale — Dorothea. 1831–1906, British schoolmistress, a champion of women's education and suffrage. As principal of Cheltenham Ladies' College (1858–1906) she introduced important reforms
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