7-letter words containing i, n
- benzine — a volatile mixture of the lighter aliphatic hydrocarbon constituents of petroleum
- benzoic — of, containing, or derived from benzoic acid or benzoin
- benzoin — a gum resin containing benzoic acid, obtained from various trees of the genus Styrax, esp S. benzoin of Java and Sumatra, and used in ointments, perfume, etc
- bepaint — to dye; paint over
- berline — a limousine with a glass partition between the front and rear seats
- bernice — a feminine name: var. Berenice
- bernina — a mountain in SE Switzerland, in the Rhaetian Alps. 13,295 feet (4050 meters).
- bernini — Gian Lorenzo (dʒan loˈrɛntso). 1598–1680, Italian painter, architect, and sculptor: the greatest exponent of the Italian baroque
- besaint — to give the status of a saint to
- beshine — to illuminate or shine on
- bestain — to stain
- besting — of the highest quality, excellence, or standing: the best work; the best students.
- betaine — a sweet-tasting alkaloid that occurs in the sugar beet and other plants and in animals. Formula: C5H11NO2
- bethink — to cause (oneself) to consider or meditate
- bettina — a female given name, form of Elizabeth.
- betting — the laying of wagers
- biafran — of or relating to Biafra or its inhabitants
- bicorne — a two-cornered cocked hat worn especially in the 18th and early 19th centuries.
- bidding — an order; command (often in the phrases do or follow the bidding of, at someone's bidding)
- biennia — a period of two years.
- big ben — the bell in the clock tower of the Houses of Parliament, London
- big end — the larger end of a connecting rod in an internal-combustion engine
- big gun — If you refer to someone as a big gun, you mean that they have a lot of power or influence.
- big one — a thousand dollars
- big ten — a group of large universities, located chiefly in the Midwestern U.S., forming a league for intercollegiate sports
- big win — (jargon) An MIT term for a Good Thing or a lucky accident.
- big-lan — ["BIG-LAN Frequently Asked Questions Memo", BIG-LAN DIGEST V4:I8, February 14, 1992.]
- bigener — a hybrid between individuals of different genera
- bigging — a building, especially one's home.
- bighorn — a large wild sheep, Ovis canadensis, inhabiting mountainous regions in North America and NE Asia: family Bovidae, order Artiodactyla. The male has massive curved horns, and the species is well adapted for climbing and leaping
- bigness — the fact or condition of being large in size, extent, amount, etc.
- bikaner — a walled city in NW India, in Rajasthan: capital of the former state of Bikaner, on the edge of the Thar Desert. Pop: 529 007 (2001)
- bilking — to defraud; cheat: He bilked the government of almost a million dollars.
- billing — the relative importance of a performer or act as reflected in the prominence given in programmes, advertisements, etc
- billion — A billion is a thousand million.
- billman — a person armed with a bill or billhook
- biltong — strips of meat dried and cured in the sun
- bin end — the last bottles in a particular bin
- binders — a person or thing that binds.
- bindery — a place in which books are bound
- binding — A binding promise, agreement, or decision must be obeyed or carried out.
- bingham — George Caleb1811-79; U.S. painter
- binging — a period or bout, usually brief, of excessive indulgence, as in eating, drinking alcoholic beverages, etc.; spree.
- binning — a box or enclosed place for storing grain, coal, or the like.
- binocle — an opera- or field-glass employing telescopic tubes for both eyes
- biobank — any large store of human biological samples for research into the genetic and environmental causes of disease
- biogeny — the evolutionary history of living organisms
- bionics — the study of certain biological functions, esp those relating to the brain, that are applicable to the development of electronic equipment, such as computer hardware, designed to operate in a similar manner
- bionomy — the branch of science concerned with the laws of life
- biotron — a climate-control chamber used to examine how living organisms respond to specific climatic conditions