7-letter words containing es
- bigness — the fact or condition of being large in size, extent, amount, etc.
- bilboes — a long iron bar with two sliding shackles, formerly used to confine the ankles of a prisoner
- billies — a male given name, form of William.
- birdies — a small bird.
- bitless — without a (horse's) bit
- blesbok — an antelope, Damaliscus dorcas (or albifrons), of southern Africa. The coat is a deep reddish-brown with a white blaze between the eyes; the horns are lyre-shaped
- blessed — If someone is blessed with a particular good quality or skill, they have that good quality or skill.
- blesser — someone who blesses
- blithes — a female given name.
- blitzes — Military. an overwhelming all-out attack, especially a swift ground attack using armored units and air support. an intensive aerial bombing.
- bobbies — a male given name, form of Robert.
- boldest — not hesitating or fearful in the face of actual or possible danger or rebuff; courageous and daring: a bold hero.
- bolices — to do (something) badly; bungle (often followed by up): His interference bollixed up the whole deal.
- boneset — any of various North American plants of the genus Eupatorium, esp E. perfoliatum, which has flat clusters of small white flowers: family Asteraceae (composites)
- boobies — a stupid person; dunce.
- boonies — The boonies are the same as the boondocks.
- bossest — a person who employs or superintends workers; manager.
- bourges — a city in central France. Pop: 72 480 (1999)
- bowless — without a bow or bows
- boxties — Irish potato cakes
- braless — not wearing a bra
- brandes — Georg Morris (giˈɔʀˈmɔʀis) ; gē^ōrˈ m^ōˈrēs) (born Georg Morris Cohen) 1842-1927; Dan. literary critic
- bravest — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
- brescia — a city in N Italy, in Lombardy: at its height in the 16th century. Pop: 187 567 (2001)
- breslau — Wrocław
- bresson — Robert (rɔbɛr). 1901–99, French film director: his films include Le Journal d'un curé de campagne (1950), Une Femme douce (1969), and L'Argent (1983)
- bridges — Robert (Seymour). 1844–1930, English poet: poet laureate (1913–30)
- broches — (in weaving tapestries) a device on which the filling yarn is wound, used as a shuttle in passing through the shed of the loom to deposit the yarn.
- brokest — a simple past tense of break.
- budless — without buds
- bunches — a hairstyle in which hair is tied into two sections on either side of the head at the back
- bundies — a time clock.
- bungest — out of order; broken; unusable.
- bunnies — Informal. a rabbit, especially a small or young one.
- burgess — a citizen or freeman of a borough
- burlesk — a bawdy comedy show of the late 19th and early 20th centuries: the striptease eventually became one of its chief elements
- burmese — Burmese means belonging or relating to Burma, or to its people, language, or culture. Burma is now known as Myanmar.
- busiest — actively and attentively engaged in work or a pastime: busy with her work.
- bygones — past; gone by; earlier; former: The faded photograph brought memories of bygone days.
- byrnies — a coat of mail; hauberk.
- cabbies — Plural form of cabby.
- cáceres — a city in W Spain: held by the Moors (1142–1229). Pop: 87 088 (2003 est)
- cackles — to utter a shrill, broken sound or cry, as of a hen.
- caddies — Plural form of caddie.
- caesars — Plural form of caesar.
- caesium — a ductile silvery-white element of the alkali metal group that is the most electropositive metal. It occurs in pollucite and lepidolite and is used in photocells. The radioisotope caesium-137, with a half-life of 30.2 years, is used in radiotherapy. Symbol: Cs; atomic no: 55; atomic wt: 132.90543; valency: 1; relative density: 1.873; melting pt: 28.39±0.01°C; boiling pt: 671°C
- caesura — (in modern prosody) a pause, esp for sense, usually near the middle of a verse line
- cajoles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cajole.
- calices — calix
- callest — Archaic second-person singular form of call.