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9-letter words containing t, i, b

  • 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
  • billeting — the activity of assigning soldiers or others to accommodation that is not normally used by them
  • billionth — The billionth item in a series is the one you count as number one billion.
  • bimonthly — A bimonthly event or publication happens or appears every two months.
  • bimotored — having two engines.
  • binervate — (of leaves) having two longitudinal ribs
  • binturong — an arboreal SE Asian viverrine mammal, Arctictis binturong, closely related to the palm civets but larger and having long shaggy black hair
  • bioactive — (of a substance) having or producing an effect on living tissue
  • bioethics — the study of ethical problems arising from biological research and its applications in such fields as organ transplantation, genetic engineering, or artificial insemination
  • biologist — a specialist in biology.
  • biometric — Biometric tests and devices use biological information about a person to create a detailed record of their personal characteristics.
  • bioparent — a biological parent
  • biopirate — a person who is responsible for biopiracy
  • biorhythm — a cyclically recurring pattern of physiological states in an organism or organ, such as alpha rhythm or circadian rhythm; believed by some to affect physical and mental states and behaviour
  • biosafety — the precautions taken to control the cultivation and distribution of genetically modified crops and products
  • biostable — resistant to the effects of microorganisms
  • biostatic — the branch of biology dealing with the structure of organisms in relation to their functions (opposed to biodynamics).
  • biostrome — a rock layer consisting of a deposit of organic material, such as fossils
  • bioturbed — stirred by organisms
  • bipartite — consisting of or having two parts
  • bipinnate — (of pinnate leaves) having the leaflets themselves divided into smaller leaflets
  • bird shot — small-sized shot used for shooting birds.
  • birdwatch — to watch birds
  • birthdate — Your birthdate is the same as your date of birth.
  • birthmark — A birthmark is a mark on someone's skin that has been there since they were born.
  • birthname — a name given at birth
  • birthrate — the number of births per year per thousand of population in a given community, area, or group: sometimes other units of time or population are used
  • birthroot — any of several North American plants of the genus Trillium, esp T. erectum, whose tuber-like roots were formerly used by the Native Americans as an aid in childbirth: family Trilliaceae
  • birthwort — any of several climbing plants of the genus Aristolochia, esp A. clematitis of Europe, once believed to ease childbirth: family Aristolochiaceae
  • bisection — to cut or divide into two equal or nearly equal parts.
  • bisectrix — the bisector of the angle between the optic axes of a crystal
  • biseriate — (of plant parts, such as petals) arranged in two whorls, cycles, rows, or series
  • biserrate — (of leaf margins, etc) having serrations that are themselves serrate
  • bismuthic — of or containing bismuth in the pentavalent state
  • bismuthyl — Chemistry. the univalent group BiO + , occurring in certain bismuth salts, as bismuth oxychloride, BiOCl.
  • bismutite — a mineral, bismuth carbonate, resulting from the alteration of bismuth minerals: a minor source of bismuth.
  • bisontine — relating to bison
  • bissextus — February 29th: the extra day added to the Julian calendar every fourth year (except those evenly divisible by 400, a rule introduced by the Gregorian calendar) to compensate for the approximately six hours a year by which the common year of 365 days falls short of the solar year.
  • bissonata — a coarse woolen cloth constructed in plain weave and dyed black or brown, used in the manufacture of clerical vestments.
  • bisulcate — marked by two grooves
  • bisulfate — an acid sulfate containing the monovalent negative radical HSO4
  • bisulfite — an acid sulfite containing the monovalent negative radical HSO3
  • bit decay — bit rot
  • bit field — (data)   Part of an item of data, storage location or message, identified as a certain number of contiguous bits starting at a certain bit position within the data. Bit position zero is usually the least significant bit. For example, in an ARM machine code instruction the four-bit field at bits 28 to 31 (the four most significant bits in the 32-bit word) is the "condition code".
  • bit gauge — a device for stopping a bit when it has reached a desired depth.
  • bit plane — (graphics)   (Or "bitplane") The memory in a graphic display device which holds a complete one-bit-per-pixel image. Several bit planes may be used in conjunction to give more bits per pixel or to overlay several images or mask one with another. "Bit plane" may be used as a synonym for "bitmap", though the latter suggests the data itself rather than the memory and also suggests a graphics file format.
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