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7-letter words containing s, e

  • baffies — slippers
  • baffles — Plural form of baffle.
  • bagasse — the pulp remaining after the extraction of juice from sugar cane or similar plants: used as fuel and for making paper, etc
  • baggers — Plural form of bagger.
  • baggies — (lowercase) Informal. any small bag or packet.
  • bagless — (esp of a vacuum cleaner) not containing a bag
  • baguets — Plural form of baguet.
  • bailers — Plural form of bailer.
  • baileys — Plural form of bailey.
  • baiters — Plural form of baiter.
  • baker's — a bakery or shop run by a baker selling bread and usually cakes, buns etc
  • baldest — Superlative form of bald.
  • baldies — a bald person (sometimes used as a facetious term of address).
  • ballers — Plural form of baller.
  • ballets — Plural form of ballet.
  • balshem — a person who works miracles by calling upon the name of God, especially one of the German and Polish Jews of the 16th–19th centuries considered to be saintly and to possess magical powers.
  • balteus — (on an Ionic capital) the horizontal band connecting the volutes on either side.
  • banders — a thin, flat strip of some material for binding, confining, trimming, protecting, etc.: a band on each bunch of watercress.
  • bandies — to pass from one to another or back and forth; give and take; trade; exchange: to bandy blows; to bandy words.
  • bangers — A sausage.
  • bangles — Plural form of bangle.
  • banjoes — Plural form of banjo.
  • bankers — Plural form of banker.
  • banners — Plural form of banner.
  • banshee — In Irish folk stories, a banshee is a female spirit who warns you by her long, sad cry that someone in your family is going to die.
  • banshie — (in Irish folklore) a spirit in the form of a wailing woman who appears to or is heard by members of a family as a sign that one of them is about to die.
  • banters — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of banter.
  • baptise — to immerse in water or sprinkle or pour water on in the Christian rite of baptism: They baptized the new baby.
  • barbels — Plural form of barbel.
  • barbers — Plural form of barber.
  • barbets — Plural form of barbet.
  • barbies — Plural form of barbie.
  • bareish — Somewhat bare.
  • barents — Willem [wil-uh m] /ˈwɪl əm/ (Show IPA), died 1597, Dutch navigator and explorer.
  • barkers — Plural form of barker.
  • barless — without a bar or bars
  • barneys — Plural form of barney.
  • barotse — a member of a Negroid people of central Africa living chiefly in SW Zambia
  • barques — Plural form of barque.
  • barrels — Plural form of barrel.
  • barrens — (in North America) a stretch of usually level land that is sparsely vegetated or barren
  • barrets — Plural form of barret.
  • barries — Sir James M(atthew) 1860–1937, Scottish novelist, short-story writer, and playwright.
  • barters — Plural form of barter.
  • barthes — Roland. 1915–80, French writer and critic, who applied structuralist theory to literature and popular culture: his books include Mythologies (1957) and Elements of Semiology (1964)
  • barwise — (of a charge or charges) transversely across an escutcheon, in the manner of a bar.
  • barytes — a colourless or white mineral consisting of barium sulphate in orthorhombic crystalline form, occurring in sedimentary rocks and with sulphide ores: a source of barium. Formula: BaSO4
  • bascule — a bridge with a movable section hinged about a horizontal axis and counterbalanced by a weight
  • base 64 — (file format, algorithm)   A file format using 64 ASCII characters to encode the six bit binary data values 0-63. To convert data to base 64, the first byte is placed in the most significant eight bits of a 24-bit buffer, the next in the middle eight, and the third in the least significant eight bits. If there a fewer than three bytes to encode, the corresponding buffer bits will be zero. The buffer is then used, six bits at a time, most significant first, as indices into the string "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/" and the indicated character output. If there were only one or two input bytes, the output is padded with two or one "=" characters respectively. This prevents extra bits being added to the reconstructed data. The process then repeats on the remaining input data. Base 64 is used when transmitting binary data through text-only media such as electronic mail, and has largely replaced the older uuencode encoding.
  • baseman — a fielder positioned near a base
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