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7-letter words containing as

  • basescu — Traian. born 1951, Romanian politician, president of Romania (2004–14)
  • bash in — If someone bashes a person's or animal's head in, they hit it very hard and cause severe injuries to it.
  • bash up — If someone bashes you up, they attack you violently and injure you.
  • bashaws — Plural form of bashaw.
  • bashers — Plural form of basher.
  • bashful — Someone who is bashful is shy and easily embarrassed.
  • bashing — a crushing blow.
  • bashkir — a member of a Mongoloid people of E central Russia, living chiefly in the Bashkir Republic
  • bashlik — a type of cone-shaped hood extending over the neck, worn primarily in Russia and Turkey as protection against bad weather
  • bashtag — (on the Twitter website) a hashtag that is used for critical and abusive comments
  • basic v — The version of the Basic programming language which comes on ROM in Acorn's RISC computers: the Archimedes range and the RiscPC. It features REPEAT and WHILE loops, multi-line IF statements, procedures and functions, local variables, error handling, system calls and a built-in assembler.
  • basicly — Misspelling of basically.
  • basidia — plural of basidium.
  • basil i — known as the Macedonian. died 886 ad, Byzantine emperor (876–86): founder of the Macedonian dynasty
  • basilan — a group of islands in the Philippines, SW of Mindanao
  • basilar — of or situated at a base
  • basilic — designating or of a large vein of the upper arm, on the inner side of the biceps muscle
  • basinal — pertaining to a basin
  • basined — Enclosed in a basin.
  • basinet — a close-fitting medieval helmet of light steel usually with a visor
  • basis's — the bottom or base of anything; the part on which something stands or rests.
  • baskets — Plural form of basket.
  • basking — to lie in or be exposed to a pleasant warmth: to bask in the sunshine.
  • basmati — a variety of cultivated long-grain rice that is notably fragrant.
  • basoche — a guild of medieval Parisian lawyers, granted the privilege of performing religious plays and known for abusing this privilege by performing comic plays instead
  • basotho — a member of the subgroup of the Sotho people who chiefly inhabit Lesotho
  • basques — Plural form of basque.
  • bassano — Jacopo [yah-kaw-paw] /ˈyɑ kɔ pɔ/ (Show IPA), (Giacomo da Ponte) 1510–92, Italian painter.
  • bassein — a city in Myanmar, on the Irrawaddy delta: a port on the Bassein River (the westernmost distributary of the Irrawaddy). Pop: 231 000 (2005 est)
  • bassing — Present participle of bass.
  • bassist — A bassist is someone who plays the bass guitar or the double bass.
  • bassman — Someone who plays the bass guitar.
  • bassoon — A bassoon is a large musical instrument of the woodwind family that is shaped like a tube and played by blowing into a curved metal pipe.
  • bastard — Bastard is an insulting word which some people use about a person, especially a man, who has behaved very badly.
  • basterd — Misspelling of bastard.
  • basters — Plural form of baster.
  • bastian — Adolf [ah-dawlf] /ˈɑ dɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1826–1905, German anthropologist.
  • bastide — a large manor house in the south of France
  • basting — loose temporary stitches; tacking
  • bastion — If a system or organization is described as a bastion of a particular way of life, it is seen as being important and effective in defending that way of life. Bastion can be used both when you think that this way of life should be ended and when you think it should be defended.
  • bastrop — a city in N Louisiana.
  • be cast — (of a sheep) to have fallen and been unable to rise
  • beastie — a small animal
  • beastly — If you describe something as beastly, you mean that it is very unpleasant.
  • bécasse — a woodcock
  • beclasp — to embrace
  • becuase — Misspelling of because.
  • bedfast — bedridden
  • belasco — David1853-1931; U.S. theatrical producer, playwright, & actor
  • belfast — the capital of Northern Ireland, a port on Belfast Lough in Belfast district, Co Antrim and Co Down: became the centre of Irish Protestantism and of the linen industry in the 17th century; seat of the Northern Ireland assembly and executive. Pop: 281 000 (2011 est)
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