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7-letter words containing a, b

  • baddest — not good in any manner or degree.
  • baddies — a villainous or criminal person.
  • baddish — rather bad; not very good.
  • badgers — Plural form of badger.
  • badging — Present participle of badge.
  • badious — chestnut coloured; brownish-red
  • badland — Alternative form of badlands.
  • badmash — naughty or bad
  • badness — not good in any manner or degree.
  • baffies — slippers
  • baffing — to strike the ground with a club in making a stroke.
  • baffled — lacking in understanding
  • baffler — Something that causes one to be baffled, particularly a difficult puzzle or riddle.
  • baffles — Plural form of baffle.
  • bag job — illegal entry, especially as authorized by an agency of the federal government to gather criminal evidence, install listening devices, etc.
  • baganda — a Negroid people of E Africa living chiefly in Uganda
  • bagarre — a brawl, fight, scuffle
  • bagasse — the pulp remaining after the extraction of juice from sugar cane or similar plants: used as fuel and for making paper, etc
  • bagatha — Bigtha.
  • bagehot — Walter. 1826–77, English economist and journalist: editor of The Economist; author of The English Constitution (1867), Physics and Politics (1872), and Lombard Street (1873)
  • baggage — Your baggage consists of the bags that you take with you when you travel.
  • baggers — Plural form of bagger.
  • baggier — Comparative form of baggy.
  • baggies — (lowercase) Informal. any small bag or packet.
  • baggily — baglike; hanging loosely.
  • bagging — coarse woven cloth; sacking
  • baghdad — the capital of Iraq, on the River Tigris: capital of the Abbasid Caliphate (762–1258). Pop: 5 910 000 (2005 est)
  • baghlan — a province in N Afghanistan.
  • bagless — (esp of a vacuum cleaner) not containing a bag
  • baglike — resembling a bag
  • bagnios — Plural form of bagnio.
  • bagnold — Enid (Algerine). 1889–1981, British novelist and playwright; her works include the novel National Velvet (1935) and the play The Chalk Garden (1955)
  • bagpipe — of or relating to the bagpipes
  • bagsing — Present participle of bags.
  • baguets — Plural form of baguet.
  • bagwash — a laundry that washes clothes without drying or pressing them
  • bagwork — a revetment, consisting of heavy material sewn into bags, for protecting embankments against scour.
  • bagworm — the larva of moths of the family Psychidae, which forms a protective case of silk covered with grass, leaves, etc
  • bahadur — a title formerly conferred by the British on distinguished Indians
  • bahaism — the religion of Bahaʾi.
  • bahamas — country on a group of islands (Bahama Islands) in the West Indies, southeast of Fla. & north of Cuba: formerly a British possession, it became independent (1973) & a member of the Commonwealth: 5,353 sq mi (13,864 sq km); pop. 264,000; cap. Nassau
  • bahrain — an independent sheikhdom on the Persian Gulf, consisting of several islands: under British protection until the declaration of independence in 1971. It has large oil reserves. Language: Arabic. Religion: Muslim. Currency: dinar. Capital: Manama. Pop: 1 281 332 (2013 est). Area: 678 sq km (262 sq miles)
  • bail up — to confine (a cow) or (of a cow) to be confined by the head in a bail
  • bailers — Plural form of bailer.
  • baileys — Plural form of bailey.
  • bailiff — A bailiff is a law officer who makes sure that the decisions of a court are obeyed. Bailiffs can take a person's furniture or possessions away if the person owes money.
  • bailing — Also, bailer. a bucket, dipper, or other container used for bailing.
  • baillie — Dame Isobel. 1895–1983, British soprano
  • bailout — A bailout of an organization or individual that has financial problems is the act of helping them by giving them money.
  • bainite — a mixture of iron and iron carbide found in incompletely hardened steels, produced when austenite is transformed at temperatures between the pearlite and martensite ranges
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