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10-letter words containing nd

  • banderoles — Plural form of banderole.
  • bandicoots — Plural form of bandicoot.
  • bandinelli — Baccio [baht-chaw] /ˈbɑt tʃɔ/ (Show IPA), or Bartolommeo [bahr-taw-lawm-me-aw] /ˌbɑr tɔ lɔmˈmɛ ɔ/ (Show IPA), 1493–1560, Italian sculptor.
  • bandishing — Present participle of bandish.
  • bandleader — A bandleader is the person who conducts a band, especially a jazz band.
  • bandmaster — the conductor of a band
  • bandoleers — Plural form of bandoleer.
  • bandoleros — Plural form of bandolero.
  • bandoliers — Plural form of bandolier.
  • bandoneons — Plural form of bandoneon.
  • bandstands — Plural form of bandstand.
  • bandwaggon — Alt form bandwagon.
  • bandwagons — Plural form of bandwagon.
  • bandwidths — Plural form of bandwidth.
  • barehanded — without weapons, tools, etc
  • barramunda — the edible Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, having paddle-like fins and a long body covered with large scales
  • barramundi — any of several large edible Australian fishes esp the percoid species Lates calcarifer (family Centropomidae) of NE coastal waters or the freshwater species Scleropages leichardti (family Osteoglossidae) of Queensland
  • bartenders — Plural form of bartender.
  • bartending — to serve or work as a bartender.
  • basel-land — a demicanton in N Switzerland. 165 sq. mi. (425 sq. km). Capital: Liestal.
  • basutoland — Lesotho
  • bat around — to discuss (an idea, proposition, etc) informally
  • bay window — A bay window is a window that sticks out from the outside wall of a house.
  • be friends — to be friendly (with)
  • beau monde — the world of fashion and society
  • beforehand — If you do something beforehand, you do it earlier than a particular event.
  • befriended — to make friends or become friendly with; act as a friend to; help; aid: to befriend the poor and the weak.
  • befriender — a person who befriends
  • behindhand — If someone is behindhand, they have been delayed or have made less progress in their work than they or other people think they should.
  • belly-land — (of an aviator) to land (an aircraft) directly on the fuselage, as because of defective landing gear.
  • ben lomond — a mountain in W central Scotland, on the E side of Loch Lomond. Height: 973 m (3192 ft)
  • bettendorf — a city in E Iowa.
  • big-endian — 1.   (data, architecture)   A computer architecture in which, within a given multi-byte numeric representation, the most significant byte has the lowest address (the word is stored "big-end-first"). Most processors, including the IBM 370 family, the PDP-10, the Motorola microprocessor families, and most of the various RISC designs current in mid-1993, are big-endian. See -endian. 2.   (networking, standard)   A backward electronic mail address. The world now follows the Internet hostname standard (see FQDN) and writes e-mail addresses starting with the name of the computer and ending up with the country code (e.g. [email protected]). In the United Kingdom the Joint Networking Team decided to do it the other way round (e.g. [email protected]) before the Internet domain standard was established. Most gateway sites required ad-hockery in their mailers to handle this. By July 1994 this parochial idiosyncracy was on the way out and mailers started to reject big-endian addresses. By about 1996, people would look at you strangely if you suggested such a bizarre thing might ever have existed.
  • bitter end — the end of a line, chain, or cable, esp the end secured in the chain locker of a vessel
  • black hand — a group of Sicilian blackmailers and terrorists formed in the 1870s and operating in the US in the early 20th century
  • black land — a black, clayey soil.
  • blacklands — an area of fertile soil in Texas
  • blandisher — someone who blandishes
  • blind copy — a copy of a letter or the like, the original of which bears no evidence that the copy was sent to some other person.
  • blind date — A blind date is an arrangement made for you to spend a romantic evening with someone you have never met before.
  • blind door — a door having louvers permitting circulation of air.
  • blind hole — a hole whose green cannot be seen by the approaching golfer because of trees or other obstructions.
  • blind seed — a disease of ryegrass, characterized by shriveled, soft seeds, caused by a fungus, Phialea temulenta.
  • blind side — the side of the field between the scrum and the nearer touchline
  • blind spot — If you say that someone has a blind spot about something, you mean that they seem to be unable to understand it or to see how important it is.
  • blind test — a test in which the participants cannot identify the products that they are testing
  • blind-side — the part of one's field of vision, as to the side and rear, where one is unable to see approaching objects.
  • blind-spot — Also called blind spot. an area in which radio or cell phone signals are weak and their reception poor.
  • blind-worm — a limbless European lizard, Anguis fragilis, related to the glass lizards.
  • blindingly — unable to see; lacking the sense of sight; sightless: a blind man.
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