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6-letter words that end in y

  • bailey — the outermost wall or court of a castle
  • bakery — A bakery is a building where bread, pastries, and cakes are baked, or the shop where they are sold.
  • baldly — having little or no hair on the scalp: a bald head; a bald person.
  • ballsy — You can describe a person or their behaviour as ballsy if you admire them because you think they are energetic and brave.
  • barany — Robert. 1876–1936, Austrian physician; devised the Bárány test, which detects diseases of the semicircular canals of the inner ear: Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1914
  • barely — You use barely to say that something is only just true or only just the case.
  • barfly — A barfly is a person who spends a lot of time drinking in bars
  • barley — Barley is a grain that is used to make food, beer, and whisky.
  • barney — a noisy argument
  • barony — A barony is the rank or position of a baron.
  • basely — morally low; without estimable personal qualities; dishonorable; meanspirited; selfish; cowardly.
  • basify — to make basic
  • batboy — A batboy is a boy whose job is to take care of equipment that belongs to a baseball team.
  • batley — a town in N England, in Kirklees unitary authority, West Yorkshire. Pop: 49 448 (2001)
  • bawdry — obscene talk or language
  • bawley — a small fishing boat used off the coast of Essex and Kent
  • beachy — covered with gentle sandy slopes
  • beardy — wearing a beard
  • bearly — Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of bears; ursine.
  • beasty — Alternative form of beastie.
  • beatty — David, 1st Earl Beatty. 1871–1936, British admiral of the fleet in World War I
  • beauty — Beauty is the state or quality of being beautiful.
  • beechy — Of or relating to beech trees.
  • bekesy — Georg von (ˈɡeːɔrk fɔn). 1899–1972, US physicist, born in Hungary; noted for his work on the mechanism of hearing: Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1961
  • belady — to call (someone) a lady
  • belamy — a close friend
  • belfry — The belfry of a church is the top part of its tower, where the bells are.
  • bellay — Joachim du (ʒɔaʃɛ̃ dy). 1522–60, French poet, a member of the Pléiade
  • beltsy — a city in NW Moldavia, NW of Kishinev.
  • benchy — (of a hillside) hollowed out in benches
  • benday — to produce using the Ben Day process
  • bepity — to feel great pity for
  • berley — bait scattered on water to attract fish
  • betony — a Eurasian plant, Stachys (or Betonica) officinalis, with a spike of reddish-purple flowers, formerly used in medicine and dyeing: family Lamiaceae (labiates)
  • betray — If you betray someone who loves or trusts you, your actions hurt and disappoint them.
  • bewray — to divulge; reveal; betray
  • bexley — a borough of SE Greater London. Pop: 219 100 (2003 est). Area: 61 sq km (23 sq miles)
  • bieldy — sheltered
  • bigamy — Bigamy is the crime of marrying a person when you are already legally married to someone else.
  • binary — Binary describes something that has two different parts.
  • binchy — Maeve (meɪˈɪv). 1940–2012, Irish novelist and journalist; her bestselling novels include Circle of Friends (1990) and Quentins (2002)
  • biopsy — A biopsy is the removal and examination of fluids or tissue from a patient's body in order to discover why they are ill.
  • biscay — Bay ofpart of the Atlantic, on the N coast of Spain & the W coast of France
  • bisley — a village in SE England, in Surrey: annual meetings of the National Rifle Association
  • bitchy — If someone is being bitchy or is making bitchy remarks, they are saying unkind things about someone.
  • blabby — overly talkative
  • blacky — a contemptuous term used to refer to a black person.
  • blakey — Art, full name Arthur Blakey. (1919–90), US Black jazz drummer and leader of the Jazz Messengers band
  • blanky — a comfort blanket
  • blashy — very rainy
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