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6-letter words containing i, e

  • bemire — to soil with or as if with mire
  • bemist — to cloud with mist
  • bemoil — to soil with mud
  • benign — You use benign to describe someone who is kind, gentle, and harmless.
  • benita — a female given name.
  • benoitPierre [pyer] /pyɛr/ (Show IPA), (or Peter) Léonard Léopold [ley-aw-nar ley-aw-pawld] /leɪ ɔˈnar leɪ ɔˈpɔld/ (Show IPA), 1834–1901, Belgian composer.
  • benoni — a city in NE South Africa: gold mines. Pop: 94 341 (2001)
  • benzil — a yellowish organic compound
  • benzin — a colorless, volatile, flammable, liquid mixture of various hydrocarbons, obtained in the distillation of petroleum, and used in cleaning, dyeing, etc.
  • bepity — to feel great pity for
  • bergie — a vagabond, esp one living on the slopes of Table Mountain in the Western Cape province of South Africa
  • berime — to celebrate in verse.
  • bering — Vitus (ˈviːtʊs). 1681–1741, Danish navigator, who explored the N Pacific for the Russians and discovered Bering Island and the Bering Strait
  • berith — the Jewish rite of circumcising a male child eight days after his birth.
  • berlin — the capital of Germany (1871–1945 and from 1990), formerly divided (1945–90) into the eastern sector, capital of East Germany, and the western sectors, which formed an exclave in East German territory closely affiliated with West Germany: a wall dividing the sectors was built in 1961 by the East German authorities to stop the flow of refugees from east to west; demolition of the wall began in 1989 and the city was formally reunited in 1990: formerly (1618–1871) the capital of Brandenburg and Prussia. Pop: 3 388 477 (2003 est)
  • bernie — a male given name, form of Bernard.
  • bertie — a male or female given name.
  • beside — Something that is beside something else is at the side of it or next to it.
  • besigh — to sigh for or over
  • besing — to sing about joyfully
  • besoin — need
  • bespit — to cover with spittle
  • bessie — a female given name, form of Elizabeth.
  • bestie — Your bestie is your best friend.
  • bestir — to cause (oneself, or, rarely, another person) to become active; rouse
  • betide — to happen or happen to; befall (often in the phrase woe betide (someone))
  • betime — to befall, happen
  • betise — folly or lack of perception
  • betoil — to worry
  • betrim — to decorate or adorn
  • bevies — a group of birds, as larks or quail, or animals, as roebuck, in close association.
  • bewail — If you bewail something, you express great sorrow about it.
  • bewick — Thomas. 1753–1828, English wood engraver; his best-known works are Chillingham Bull (1789), a large woodcut, Aesop's Fables (1818), and his History of British Birds (1797–1804)
  • beylic — a province ruled over by a bey
  • bezier — (graphics)   (After Frenchman Pierre Bézier from Regie Renault) A collection of formulae for describing curved lines (Bezier curve) and surfaces (Bezier surface), first used in 1972 to model automobile surfaces. Curves and surfaces are defined by a set of "control points" which can be moved interactively making Bezier curves and surfaces convenient for interactive graphic design.
  • bezzie — best (esp in the phrase bezzie mate)
  • bi sex — sex with both male and female partners
  • biased — If someone is biased, they prefer one group of people to another, and behave unfairly as a result. You can also say that a process or system is biased.
  • biases — a particular tendency, trend, inclination, feeling, or opinion, especially one that is preconceived or unreasoned: illegal bias against older job applicants; the magazine’s bias toward art rather than photography; our strong bias in favor of the idea.
  • bibber — a drinker; tippler (esp in the expression wine-bibber)
  • bibble — a pebble
  • bibtex — (text, tool)   A Tex extension package for bibliographic citations, distributed with LaTeX. BibTeX uses a style-independent bibliography database (.bib file) to produce a list of sources, in a customisable style, from citations in a Latex document. It also supports some other formats. BibTeX is a separate program from LaTeX. LaTeX writes information about citations and which .bib files to use in a ".aux" file. BibTeX reads this file and outputs a ".bbl" file containing LaTeX commands to produce the source list. You must then run LaTeX again to incorporate the source list in your document. In typeset documents, "BibTeX" is written in upper case, with the "IB" slightly smaller and with the "E" as a subscript. BibTeX is described in the LaTeX book by Lamport.
  • biceps — Your biceps are the large muscles at the front of the upper part of your arms.
  • bicker — When people bicker, they argue or quarrel about unimportant things.
  • bicone — an object shaped like two cones with their bases together.
  • bidden — Bidden is a past participle of bid2.
  • bidder — A bidder is someone who offers to pay a certain amount of money for something that is being sold. If you sell something to the highest bidder, you sell it to the person who offers the most money for it.
  • biddle — John. 1615–62, English theologian; founder of Unitarianism in England
  • bident — an instrument with two prongs
  • biders — Archaic. to endure; bear.
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