8-letter words containing an
- bankcard — any plastic card issued by a bank, such as a cash card or cheque card
- bankerly — relating to or resembling a banker
- bankhead — Tallulah (Brockman). 1902–68, US stage and film actress; her successes included the plays The Little Foxes (1939) and The Skin of Our Teeth (1942)
- banknote — Banknotes are pieces of paper money.
- bankroll — To bankroll a person, organization, or project means to provide the financial resources that they need.
- bankrupt — People or organizations that go bankrupt do not have enough money to pay their debts.
- banksias — Plural form of banksia.
- bankside — the sloping side of any bank
- banksman — a crane driver's helper, who signals instructions to the driver for the movement of the crane and its jib
- bankster — a banker or investor whose financial practices have been exposed as illegal
- banlieue — a suburb of a city
- bannable — able to be banned
- banneker — Benjamin, 1731–1806, U.S. mathematician, natural historian, and astronomer.
- bannered — Decorated with a banner or banners.
- banneret — a knight who was entitled to command other knights and men-at-arms under his own banner
- bannerol — banderole
- bannocks — Plural form of bannock.
- banoffee — a filling for a pie, consisting of toffee and banana
- banquets — Plural form of banquet.
- banshees — Plural form of banshee.
- banstead — a town in S England, in NE Surrey. Pop: 19 332 (2001)
- bantengs — Plural form of banteng.
- bantered — Simple past tense and past participle of banter.
- banterer — One who banters.
- bantings — Sir Frederick Grant, 1891–1941, Canadian physician: one of the discoverers of insulin; Nobel Prize 1923.
- bantling — a young child; brat
- banville — Théodore de (teɔdɔr də). 1823–91, French poet, who anticipated the Parnassian school in his perfection of form and command of rhythm
- banxring — a small tree-dwelling and insectivorous animal, Tupaia, resembling a squirrel, native to Java and Sumatra
- banyalla — Victorian box.
- barangay — The smallest administrative division in the Philippines; a village, district, or ward.
- barbacan — barbican.
- barbican — a walled outwork or tower to protect a gate or drawbridge of a fortification
- barchans — Plural form of barchan.
- barehand — to field (the ball) with one's bare hands rather than one's glove
- bareland — (of a croft) having no house attached
- bargeman — a man who operates, or works aboard, a barge
- barracan — any of various thick, strong fabrics
- barranca — a ravine or precipice
- barthian — of or relating to Karl Barth, or his ideas
- bartizan — a small turret projecting from a wall, parapet, or tower
- basanite — a black basaltic rock containing plagioclase, augite, olivine, and nepheline, leucite, or analcite, formerly used as a touchstone
- baseband — a transmission technique using a narrow range of frequencies that allows only one message to be telecommunicated at a time
- basilian — a monk of the Eastern Christian order of St Basil, founded in Cappadocia in the 4th century ad
- batangas — a port in the Philippines, in SW Luzon. Pop: 293 000 (2005 est)
- batavian — of or relating to Batavia (a former name for Holland or Jakarta) or its inhabitants
- batwoman — a female servant in any of the armed forces
- bavarian — of or relating to Bavaria or its inhabitants
- bayesian — (of a theory) presupposing known a priori probabilities which may be subjectively assessed and which can be revised in the light of experience in accordance with Bayes' theorem. A hypothesis is thus confirmed by an experimental observation which is likely given the hypothesis and unlikely without it
- beadsman — a person who prays for another's soul, esp one paid or fed for doing so
- bean bag — A bean bag is a large round cushion filled with tiny pieces of plastic or rubber. It takes the shape of your body when you sit on it.