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6-letter words containing d, i

  • betide — to happen or happen to; befall (often in the phrase woe betide (someone))
  • bhindi — the okra as used in Indian cooking: its green pods are eaten as vegetables
  • biased — If someone is biased, they prefer one group of people to another, and behave unfairly as a result. You can also say that a process or system is biased.
  • bid in — (in an auction) to outbid all previous offers for (one's own property) to retain ownership or increase the final selling price
  • bid up — If someone bids up the value of something, they try to increase it, for example by offering to buy it at a higher price than usual.
  • bid-up — the act or an instance of increasing the price of something by forcing the bidding upward.
  • bidden — Bidden is a past participle of bid2.
  • bidder — A bidder is someone who offers to pay a certain amount of money for something that is being sold. If you sell something to the highest bidder, you sell it to the person who offers the most money for it.
  • biddle — John. 1615–62, English theologian; founder of Unitarianism in England
  • bident — an instrument with two prongs
  • biders — Archaic. to endure; bear.
  • biding — Archaic. to endure; bear.
  • bieldy — sheltered
  • biffed — a blow; punch.
  • bifold — foldable in two places
  • bihzad — Kamal ad-Din [key-mahl ahd-deen] /ˈkeɪ mɑl ɑdˈdin/ (Show IPA), c1440–c1527, Persian painter and calligrapher.
  • bildad — a friend of Job. Job 2:11.
  • bilked — to defraud; cheat: He bilked the government of almost a million dollars.
  • billed — having a bill or beak, especially one of a specified kind, shape, color, etc. (usually used in combination): a yellow-billed magpie.
  • binder — A binder is a hard cover with metal rings inside, which is used to hold loose pieces of paper.
  • bindle — a small bundle of possessions carried by a homeless person
  • biodot — a temperature-sensitive device stuck to the skin in order to monitor stress
  • biondi — Matt(hew) born 1965, U.S. swimmer.
  • birder — a person who engages in bird-watching; bird-watcher
  • birdie — In golf, if you get a birdie, you get the golf ball into a hole in one stroke fewer than the number of strokes which has been set as the standard for a good player.
  • birled — to pour (a drink) or pour a drink for.
  • bitted — Also called bollard. a strong post of wood or iron projecting, usually in pairs, above the deck of a ship, used for securing cables, lines for towing, etc.
  • blinds — unable to see; lacking the sense of sight; sightless: a blind man.
  • bluidy — bloody
  • bodgie — an unruly or uncouth young man, esp in the 1950s; teddy boy
  • bodice — The bodice of a dress is the part above the waist.
  • bodied — of or relating to the body; bodily.
  • bodies — the physical structure and material substance of an animal or plant, living or dead.
  • bodily — Your bodily needs and functions are the needs and functions of your body.
  • boding — an omen; foreboding
  • bodkin — a blunt large-eyed needle used esp for drawing tape through openwork
  • bodmin — a market town in SW England, in Cornwall, near Bodmin Moor, a granite upland rising to 420 m (1375 ft). Pop: 12 778 (2001)
  • bodoni — a style of type designed by the Italian printer Giambattista Bodoni (1740–1813)
  • boiled — that has been brought to boiling point
  • bolide — a large exceptionally bright meteor that often explodes
  • boodie — a burrowing rat kangaroo, Bettongia lesueur, found on islands off Western Australia
  • boride — a compound in which boron is the most electronegative element, esp a compound of boron and a metal
  • boudin — a French version of a black pudding
  • braide — given to deceit
  • braids — to weave together strips or strands of; plait: to braid the hair.
  • braird — the first shoots of grass or crops
  • bredie — a meat and vegetable stew
  • briand — Aristide (aristid). 1862–1932, French socialist statesman: prime minister of France 11 times. He was responsible for the separation of Church and State (1905) and he advocated a United States of Europe. Nobel peace prize 1926
  • briard — a medium-sized dog of an ancient French sheep-herding breed having a long rough coat of a single colour
  • bridal — Bridal is used to describe something that belongs or relates to a bride, or to both a bride and her bridegroom.
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