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9-letter words containing i, b, e

  • bickering — to engage in petulant or peevish argument; wrangle: The two were always bickering.
  • biconcave — (of a lens) having concave faces on both sides; concavo-concave
  • bid price — The bid price of a particular stock or share is the price that investors are willing to pay for it.
  • biddeford — a city in SW Maine.
  • bidentate — having two teeth or toothlike parts or processes
  • bielefeld — a city in Germany, in NE North Rhine-Westphalia: food, textiles. Pop: 328 452 (2003 est)
  • bielersee — German name of Lake of Bienne.
  • bienvenue — a welcome
  • bienville — Sieur de(born Jean Baptiste Le Moyne) 1680-1768; Fr. colonizer & governor of Louisiana: founder of New Orleans
  • bierstadt — Albert1830-1902; U.S. painter, born in Germany
  • bierstube — a tavern or café offering German or German-style atmosphere, décor, food, beer, etc.
  • biestings — beestings
  • bifocaled — wearing bifocals
  • bifoliate — having only two leaves
  • bifurcate — If something such as a line or path bifurcates or is bifurcated, it divides into two parts which go in different directions.
  • big apple — People sometimes refer to the city of New York as the Big Apple.
  • big beast — an important or powerful person
  • big house — a penitentiary (usually preceded by the).
  • big media — the mainstream media, as television and newspapers: blogs that compete with big media.
  • big money — Big money is an amount of money that seems very large to you, especially money which you get easily.
  • big noise — Someone who is a big noise has an important position in a group or organization.
  • big skate — See under skate2 .
  • big style — to a great degree or extent
  • big wheel — A big wheel is a very large upright wheel with carriages around the edge of it which people can ride in. Big wheels are often found at theme parks or fun fairs.
  • big-boned — having bones that are unusually massive
  • big-timer — Informal. the highest or most important level in any profession or occupation: She's a talented violinist, but she's not ready for the big time.
  • bigarreau — any of several heart-shaped varieties of sweet cherry that have firm flesh
  • bigeminal — happening in pairs
  • bigeneric — (of a hybrid plant) derived from parents of two different genera
  • bigheaded — Informal. an excessive estimate of one's importance; conceit.
  • bigorexia — muscle dysmorphia.
  • bigotedly — in a bigoted manner
  • bigotgate — an incident in the 2010 British general election in which the Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, described in private a voter he had met as a ‘bigoted woman’ not realizing that his radio microphone was still on and that his comments were being recorded
  • biguanide — any of a class of compounds some of which are used in the treatment of certain forms of diabetes
  • bijection — a mathematical function or mapping that is both an injection and a surjection and therefore has an inverse
  • bijective — (of a function, relation, etc) associating two sets in such a way that every member of each set is uniquely paired with a member of the other
  • bike lane — A bike lane is a part of the road which is intended to be used only by people riding bicycles.
  • bike path — A bike path is a special path on which people can travel by bicycle separately from motor vehicles.
  • bike rack — stand for parking cycles
  • bike ride — a ride on a bicycle
  • bilabiate — divided into two lips
  • bilateral — Bilateral negotiations, meetings, or agreements, involve only the two groups or countries that are directly concerned.
  • bile acid — any of various steroid acids, produced in the liver and stored with bile, that emulsify fats during digestion.
  • bile duct — the duct that conveys bile from the liver and the gall bladder to the duodenum
  • bile salt — a product of a bile acid and a base, functioning as an emulsifier of lipids and fatty acids for absorption in the duodenum.
  • bilection — bolection
  • bilestone — gallstone.
  • bilineate — marked with two usually parallel lines.
  • biliteral — consisting of two letters
  • billables — that may or should be billed: Attorneys put in hundreds of billable hours on the case.
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