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12-letter words containing g

  • bible banger — Bible-thumper.
  • bible-banger — Bible-thumper.
  • bibliography — A bibliography is a list of books on a particular subject.
  • bibliologist — a student of bibliology
  • bibliopegist — a bookbinder
  • biflagellate — having two flagella
  • big business — Big business is business which involves very large companies and very large sums of money.
  • big lie, the — a gross falsification or misrepresentation of the facts, with constant repetition and embellishment to lend credibility
  • big-sounding — meant to be impressive in scale
  • bilingualism — Bilingualism is the ability to speak two languages equally well.
  • bilinguality — the ability to speak two languages fluently.
  • billingsgate — the largest fish market in London, on the N bank of the River Thames; moved to new site at Canary Wharf in 1982 and the former building converted into offices
  • binary digit — either of the two digits 0 or 1, used in binary notation
  • binding post — one of several metal pegs or rods, fitted into a loose-leaf binder, for holding sheets with prepunched holes.
  • binge eating — the practice of eating excessive amounts of food over a short period of time
  • bingo caller — the person who shouts out the numbers to bingo players
  • bio-organism — a dangerous fast-proliferating organism that could be used as the basis of a biological weapon
  • biocoenology — the branch of ecology concerned with the relationships and interactions between the members of a natural community
  • biocomputing — the application of computing to problems in biology, biochemistry, and genetics
  • biogeography — the branch of biology concerned with the geographical distribution of plants and animals
  • biographical — Biographical facts, notes, or details are concerned with the events in someone's life.
  • bioinorganic — pertaining to the biological activity of metal complexes and nonmetal compounds based on elements other than carbon (contrasted with bioorganic).
  • biologically — pertaining to biology.
  • biomagnetics — the study of magnetic fields as a form of therapy
  • biomagnetism — animal magnetism.
  • biosociology — the study of the evolution of social forms and the development of social behavior in terms analogous to or correlated with biological studies.
  • bird nesting — the activity of searching for birds' nests as a hobby
  • bird-dogging — to follow, watch carefully, or investigate.
  • birth weight — the amount a baby weighs when first born
  • biscay green — a yellowish green.
  • bit diddling — bit bashing
  • bit stuffing — (protocol)   A protocol which guarantees the receiver of synchronous data can recover the sender's clock. When the data stream sent contains a large number of adjacent bits which cause no transition of the signal, the receiver cannot adjust its clock to maintain proper synchronised reception. To eliminate the possibility of such a pathological case, when a preset number of transitionless bits have been transmitted, a bit which does cause a transition is "stuffed" (transmitted) by the sender. The receiver follows the same protocol and removes the stuffed bit after the specified number of transitionless bits, but can use the stuffed bit to recover the sender's clock. The advantage of bit stuffing is that only a bit (not a byte) is inserted in the data stream, and that only when the content of the data stream fails to provide a timing signal to the receiver. Thus very nearly 100% of the bits transported are useful data. In contrast, asynchronous transmission of data "throws away" a start bit and one or more stop bits for each data byte sent.
  • biting louse — any wingless insect of the order Mallophaga, such as the chicken louse: external parasites of birds and mammals with biting mouthparts
  • biting mania — an epidemic in which people have a compulsion to bite others, as in 15th-century Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands.
  • biting midge — any small fragile dipterous fly of the family Ceratopogonidae, most of which suck the blood of mammals, birds, or other insects
  • biting point — (in driving) the point at which the plates of the clutch connect as the clutch pedal is released
  • biting stage — the second part of the oral phase of psychosexual development, approximately 8 to18 months of age, during which a child has the urge to bite or chew objects.
  • black grouse — a large N European grouse, Lyrurus tetrix, the male of which has a bluish-black plumage and lyre-shaped tail
  • black knight — a person or firm that makes an unwelcome takeover bid for a company
  • black plague — Great Plague.
  • black tongue — canine pellagra.
  • black-figure — pertaining to or designating a style of vase painting developed in Greece in the 7th and 6th centuries b.c., chiefly characterized by silhouetted figures painted in black slip on a red clay body, details incised into the design, and a two-dimensional structure of form and space.
  • blackbirding — a common European thrush, Turdus merula, the male of which is black with a yellow bill.
  • blaze orange — a very bright orange, as on a traffic cone.
  • blazing star — a North American liliaceous plant, Chamaelirium luteum, with a long spike of small white flowers
  • blind casing — (in a box window frame) a rough framework to which the trim is secured.
  • blind flange — a disk for closing the end of a pipe, having holes for bolting it to a flange.
  • blisteringly — causing a blister or blisters.
  • blitzkrieged — blitz (defs 1, 2, 5).
  • block caving — a method of mining a large block of ore by systematically undercutting so the ore will cave. Compare cave (def 5a).
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