7-letter words containing bi
- ardabil — city in NW Iran, near the Caspian Sea: pop. 311,000
- ardebil — a town in NW Iran, near the Caspian Sea.
- ash bin — a dustbin
- autobio — autobiography.
- awlbird — the green woodpecker
- axebird — a nightjar of northern Queensland and New Guinea with a cry that sounds like a chopping axe
- babbies — Plural form of babby.
- babbitt — a narrow-minded and complacent member of the middle class
- babiche — thongs or lacings of rawhide
- babinet — Jacques (ʒɑk) 1794–1872, French physicist, noted for his work on the diffraction of light
- backbit — Simple past tense and past participle of backbite.
- bambini — a small child or baby.
- bambino — a young child, esp an Italian one
- barbies — Plural form of barbie.
- barbing — a point or pointed part projecting backward from a main point, as of a fishhook or arrowhead.
- berbice — a river in E Guyana, flowing NE to the Atlantic Ocean. About 370 miles (595 km) long.
- biafran — of or relating to Biafra or its inhabitants
- biassed — 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.
- biaxial — (esp of a crystal) having two axes
- bibasic — with two bases
- bibbery — drinking
- bibcock — a tap having a nozzle bent downwards and supplied from a horizontal pipe
- bibelot — an attractive or curious trinket
- bibless — (of an apron) with no bib
- biblike — resembling a bib
- biblio- — indicating book or books
- biblist — biblicist
- bichord — (of a musical instrument) having two strings for one note
- bicolor — of two colors
- bicorne — a two-cornered cocked hat worn especially in the 18th and early 19th centuries.
- bicycle — A bicycle is a vehicle with two wheels which you ride by sitting on it and pushing two pedals with your feet. You steer it by turning a bar that is connected to the front wheel.
- bidarka — a canoe covered in animal skins, esp sealskin, used by the Inuit of Alaska
- bidault — Georges (ʒɔːrʒ). 1899–1983, French statesman; prime minister (1946, 1949–50). His opposition to Algerian independence led him to support the OAS: he was charged with treason (1963) and fled abroad
- biddies — a chicken.
- bidding — an order; command (often in the phrases do or follow the bidding of, at someone's bidding)
- bide by — to abide by
- biennia — a period of two years.
- bifidus — a genus of anaerobic bacteria, many of which are present natively in the human digestive system
- bifilar — having two parallel threads, as in the suspension of certain measuring instruments
- bifocal — having two different focuses
- bifrost — the rainbow bridge of the gods from their realm Asgard to earth
- bifteck — beefsteak
- big ben — the bell in the clock tower of the Houses of Parliament, London
- big boy — an articulated steam locomotive having a four-wheeled front truck, one section of eight driving wheels, a second section of eight driving wheels, and a four-wheeled rear truck.
- big bud — a serious disease of plants, esp of blackcurrants, in which the buds swell up as a result of attack by the gall mite Cecidophyopsis ribis
- big cat — Big cats are lions, tigers, and other large wild animals in the cat family.
- 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 ike — a self-important person.
- big lie — a false statement of outrageous magnitude employed as a propaganda measure in the belief that a lesser falsehood would not be credible.