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8-letter words that end in e

  • backline — (in some team sports) the defensive players considered as a unit
  • backlite — (in automotive styling) the rear window of a vehicle.
  • backside — Your backside is the part of your body that you sit on.
  • baculine — relating to flogging with a rod
  • baculite — an extinct species of mollusc from the Late Cretaceous period, fossils of which have been found ranging from 7cm to 2m in length
  • bad time — inopportune moment
  • badinage — Badinage is humorous or light-hearted conversation that often involves teasing someone.
  • baghouse — a dust-filtering chamber consisting of fabric filter bags
  • baguette — A baguette is a type of long, thin, white bread which is traditionally made in France.
  • bahookie — the buttocks
  • bailable — eligible for release on bail
  • bakelite — Bakelite is a type of hard plastic that was used in the past for making things such as telephones and radios.
  • bakeware — Tins, trays, and dishes that are used for baking can be referred to as bakeware.
  • baladine — a theatrical dancer or stage buffoon
  • balayage — a technique for highlighting hair in which bleach or dye is painted onto sections of the hair with a brush
  • baldpate — a person with a bald head
  • balefire — a bonfire
  • balinese — of or relating to Bali, its people, or their language
  • balisage — a method of marking a land route with dim lighting so that vehicles can travel at higher speeds in blackout conditions.
  • balkline — a line at one end of a table from behind which opening shots with the cue ball are made
  • ball ice — floating balls of slushy ice formed at sea.
  • ballance — John. 1839–93, New Zealand statesman, born in Northern Ireland: prime minister of New Zealand (1891–93)
  • ballgame — any game played with a ball
  • ballonne — a bouncing step in dancing, esp in ballet
  • ballotee — a person who has been balloted or conscripted, esp into military service or into the mines
  • ballyboe — (Ireland, historical) A townland in Ulster.
  • banalise — to render or make banal; trivialize: Television has often been accused of banalizing even the most serious subjects.
  • banalize — to make banal
  • bandfile — to file with a file band on a band mill or band saw.
  • bandmate — a fellow member of a band
  • bangable — (slang) Sexually attractive.
  • bankable — In the entertainment industry, someone or something that is described as bankable is very popular and therefore likely to be very profitable.
  • banknote — Banknotes are pieces of paper money.
  • bankside — the sloping side of any bank
  • banlieue — a suburb of a city
  • bannable — able to be banned
  • banoffee — a filling for a pie, consisting of toffee and banana
  • banville — Théodore de (teɔdɔr də). 1823–91, French poet, who anticipated the Parnassian school in his perfection of form and command of rhythm
  • bar code — A bar code is an arrangement of numbers and parallel lines that is printed on products to be sold in shops. The bar code can be read by computers.
  • bar game — any game or contest that takes place in a pub
  • bar line — the vertical line marking the boundary between one bar and the next
  • bar none — You use bar none to add emphasis to a statement that someone or something is the best of their kind.
  • barbecue — A barbecue is a piece of equipment which you use for cooking on in the open air.
  • barbeque — barbecue
  • barbette — (formerly) an earthen platform inside a parapet, from which heavy guns could fire over the top
  • barbusse — Henri (ɑ̃ri). 1873–1935, French novelist and poet. His novels include L'Enfer (1908) and Le Feu (1916), reflecting the horror of World War I
  • barbwire — barbed wire
  • barebone — a very thin person whose bones show through the skin
  • baregine — a whitish, mucilaginous substance found in the thermal waters of Barèges in France, considered to have healing properties
  • baritone — In music, a baritone is a man with a fairly deep singing voice that is lower than that of a tenor but higher than that of a bass.
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