(anatomy) A bony, often sharp, protuberance, especially that of the ischium.
(botany) A sharp, tapering point extending from a plant.
Quickness of perception or discernment; penetration of mind; the faculty of nice discrimination.
aeneus
aenius
agneau
alrune
alumen
aneuch
angule
annule
annule
noun
(zoology) A circular band formed by two transverse grooves in the cuticle of some nematodes with consequent apparent segmentation; annulus.
anoure
anuses
aquone
attune
attune
verb
(music, transitive) To bring into musical accord.
(music, transitive) To tune (an instrument).
(transitive, figurative) To bring into harmony or accord.
aubine
audwen
augean
augean
Adjective
Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of Augeas.
Hence, very filthy.
augend
augend
noun
(arithmetic) A quantity to which another is added.
auncel
auncel
noun
A crude balance for weighing, and a kind of weight, formerly used in England.
aunter
aunter
noun
(obsolete) adventure
auntie
auntie
noun
(Asia, Africa) Term of familiarity or respect for a middle-aged or elderly woman.
(LGBT, slang, US) An elderly gay man.
Diminutive of aunt
verb
To be or behave like the aunt of.
auntre
aurene
aurine
aurine
noun
Dated form of aurin.
austen
austen
Proper noun
a variant of Austin.
English novelist.
avenue
avenue
noun
A broad street, especially one bordered by trees or, in cities laid out in a grid pattern, one that is on a particular side of the city or that runs in a particular direction.
A method or means by which something may be accomplished.
A way or opening for entrance into a place; a passage by which a place may be reached; a way of approach or of exit.
The principal walk or approach to a house which is withdrawn from the road, especially, such approach bordered on each side by trees; any broad passageway thus bordered.
axunge
axunge
noun
(medicine) Lard prepared for medical use.
Fat or grease, especially of a pig or goose.
banque
banque
noun
Alternative form of bank (“underwriter or controller of a card game”)
beaune
bebung
bebung
noun
(music) A tremolo effect, such as that produced on the piano by vibratory repetition of a note with sustained use of the pedal.
becuna
becuna
noun
Sphyraena sphyraena, a Mediterranean fish.
beduin
bedung
bedung
verb
(transitive) To cover with dung or manure.
(transitive, sometimes figuratively) To bedaub or defile.
beguin
begunk
begunk
noun
(dialectal, chiefly Scotland) An illusion; trick; cheat.
verb
(transitive, dialectal, chiefly Scotland) To befool; deceive; balk; jilt.
behung
behung
adj
Draped; ornamented with something hanging.
verb
simple past tense and past participle of behang
benhur
benumb
benumb
verb
(transitive) To make numb, as by cold or anesthetic.
(transitive, figurative) To deaden, dull (the mind, faculties, etc.).
beroun
blunge
blunge
verb
(pottery) To mix clay and water.
bounce
bounce
noun
(Internet) An email that returns to the sender because of a delivery failure.
(archaic) A drink based on brandyᵂ.
(archaic) A heavy, sudden, and often noisy, blow or thump.
(archaic) Bluster; brag; untruthful boasting; audacious exaggeration; an impudent lie; a bouncer.
(slang, African-American Vernacular, uncountable) A good beat in music.
(slang, African-American Vernacular, uncountable) A talent for leaping.
(uncountable) A genre of hip-hop music of New Orleans, characterized by often lewd call-and-response chants.
A bang, boom.
A change of direction of motion after hitting the ground or an obstacle.
A movement up and then down (or vice versa), once or repeatedly.
Scyliorhinus canicula, a European dogfish.
The sack, dismissal.
verb
(US, slang, dated) To eject violently, as from a room; to discharge unceremoniously, as from employment.
(archaic) To strike or thump, so as to rebound, or to make a sudden noise; to knock loudly.
(intransitive) To change the direction of motion after hitting an obstacle.
(intransitive) To leap or spring suddenly or unceremoniously; to bound.
(intransitive) To move quickly up and then down, or vice versa, once or repeatedly.
(intransitive, aviation) To land hard and lift off again due to excess momentum.
(intransitive, electronics) To turn power off and back on; to reset.
(intransitive, informal, of a cheque/check) To be refused by a bank because it is drawn on insufficient funds.
(intransitive, skydiving) To land hard at unsurvivable velocity with fatal results.
(intransitive, slang, African-American Vernacular) (sometimes employing the preposition with) To have sexual intercourse.
(slang, archaic) To boast; to bluster.
(slang, archaic) To bully; to scold.
(transitive) To cause to move quickly up and down, or back and forth, once or repeatedly.
(transitive, air combat) To attack unexpectedly.
(transitive, colloquial) To suggest or introduce (an idea, etc.) to (off or by) somebody, in order to gain feedback.
(transitive, informal) To fail to cover (have sufficient funds for) (a draft presented against one's account).
(transitive, intransitive, Internet, of an e-mail message) To return undelivered.
(transitive, sound recording) To mix (two or more tracks of a multi-track audio tape recording) and record the result onto a single track, in order to free up tracks for further material to be added.
To move rapidly (between).
bourne
bourne
noun
(archaic) A goal or destination.
(countable) A stream or brook in which water flows only seasonally; a small stream or brook.
(countable, archaic) A boundary; a limit.
brunei
brunel
bruner
brunet
brunet
adj
(rare) Of a man or boy, having brown or black hair.
(rare) Of a man's or boy's hair: brown or black.
noun
(rare) A man or boy with brown or black hair.
buenas
buenos
bullen
bulten
bunaea
bunche
bunder
bunder
noun
A type of surf boat used in India.
A unit of measurement for land area used in the Low Countries.
bundle
bundle
noun
(biology) A cluster of closely bound muscle or nerve fibres.
(computing, Mac OS X) A directory containing related resources such as source code; application bundle.
(informal) A large amount, especially of money.
(law) A court bundle, the assemblage of documentation prepared for, and referred to during, a court case.
(linguistics, education) A sequence of two or more words that occur in language with high frequency but are not idiomatic; a chunk, cluster, or lexical bundle.
(mathematics) Topological space composed of a base space and fibers projected to the base space.
A group of objects held together by wrapping or tying.
A group of products or services sold together as a unit.
A package wrapped or tied up for carrying.
A quantity of paper equal to two reams (1000 sheets).
verb
(computing) To sell hardware and software as a single product.
(dated, intransitive) To sleep on the same bed without undressing.
(intransitive) To dress warmly. Usually bundle up
(intransitive) To hurry.
(intransitive) To prepare for departure; to set off in a hurry or without ceremony; used with away, off, out.
(slang) Synonym of dogpile: to form a pile of people upon a victim.
(transitive) To dress someone warmly.
(transitive) To hastily or clumsily push, put, carry or otherwise send something into a particular place.
(transitive) To hustle; to dispatch something or someone quickly.
(transitive) To tie or wrap together into a bundle.
bunged
bunged
verb
simple past tense and past participle of bung
bungee
bungee
noun
(slang) A rubber eraser.
An elastic cord tied to the ankles of the jumper in bungee jumping.
verb
To bungee jump
bunger
bunger
noun
(Australia) A cigarette.
(Australia) A firecracker.
bungey
bungle
bungle
noun
A botched or incompetently handled action or situation; a blunder.
verb
(intransitive) To act or work incompetently; to fumble.
(transitive) To incompetently perform (a task); to ruin (something) through incompetent action; to botch up, to bumble.
bunked
bunked
verb
simple past tense and past participle of bunk
bunker
bunker
noun
(Britain, chiefly historical) A large bin or container for storing coal, often built outdoors in the yard of a house.
(Britain, slang) One who bunks off; a truant from school.
(US, regional) The menhaden, any of several species of fish in the genera Brevoortia and Ethmidium.
(golf) A hazard on a golf course consisting of a sand-filled hollow.
(military) A hardened shelter, often partly buried or fully underground, designed to protect the inhabitants from falling bombs or other attacks.
(nautical) A container for storing coal or fuel oil for a ship's engine; (by extension) the quantity of fuel needed to replenish that container.
(paintball) An obstacle used to block an opposing player's view and field of fire.
(rail transport) The coal compartment on a tank engine.
(slang) A kitchen worktop.
A sort of box or chest, as in a window, the lid of which serves as a seat.
verb
(Nigeria) To steal bunker fuel by illicitly siphoning it off.
(by extension, Britain, informal) To place (someone) in a position that is difficult to get out of; to hinder.
(golf) To hit (a golf ball) into a bunker; (chiefly passive) to place (a golfer) in the position of having a golf ball in a bunker.
(nautical) Of a vessel: to take a load of coal or fuel oil for its engine.
(paintball) To fire constantly at (an opponent hiding behind an obstacle), trapping them and preventing them from firing at other players; also, to eliminate (an opponent behind an obstacle) by rushing to the position and firing at extremely close range as the player becomes exposed.
Often followed by down: to take shelter in a bunker or other place.
To load (a vessel) with coal or fuel oil for the engine.
bunkie
bunkie
noun
Familiar term of address.
a small cabin with a bunk or bed(s), a free-standing bedroom or sleeping area separate from the main house or cottage, which may or may not have other facilities (a fully outfitted outbuilding with a kitchen or bathroom would be a guest house and not a bunkie)
bunkmate, someone with which one shares a bunk bed.
bunnie
bunsen
bunsen
Noun
Bunsen burner
bunted
bunted
verb
simple past tense and past participle of bunt
bunter
bunter
noun
(archaic) A female prostitute.
(archaic) A woman who picks up rags in the streets.
(archaic, by extension) A low, vulgar woman.
(baseball) One who bunts.
bunuel
burden
burden
noun
(medicine) The total amount of toxins, parasites, cancer cells, plaque or similar present in an organism.
(metalworking) The proportion of ore and flux to fuel, in the charge of a blast furnace.
(mining) The tops or heads of stream-work which lie over the stream of tin.
(music) A phrase or theme that recurs at the end of each verse in a folk song or ballad.
(obsolete, rare) A birth.
A cause of worry; that which is grievous, wearisome, or oppressive.
A fixed quantity of certain commodities.
A heavy load.
A responsibility, onus.
The capacity of a vessel, or the weight of cargo that she will carry.
The drone of a bagpipe.
Theme, core idea.
verb
(transitive) To encumber with a literal or figurative burden.
(transitive) To impose, as a load or burden; to lay or place as a burden (something heavy or objectionable).
burned
burned
verb
simple past tense and past participle of burn
burner
burner
noun
(Internet, slang) Ellipsis of burner account.
(chemistry) A device that generates localized heat for experiments; a Bunsen burner.
(computing) A device that allows data or music to be stored on a CDR or CD-ROM.
(computing) An app that creates temporary phone numbers for a user.
(slang) A pyrotechnic tear gas canister.
(slang) An elaborate piece of graffiti.
(slang) Ellipsis of burner phone; a mobile phone used for only a short time and then thrown away so that the owner cannot be traced.
(slang) Ellipsis of coal burner.
A device for burning refuse; an incinerator.
A device that burns fuel; e.g. a diesel engine; a hot-air balloon's propulsion system.
Alternative letter-case form of Burner (“participant in Burning Man”).
An element on a kitchen stove that generates localized heat for cooking.
Someone or something which burns.
burnet
burnet
noun
Any of several species of moths of the family Zygaenidae, typically having black forewings with red spots.
Any of the herbs of genus Sanguisorba (syn. Poterium), including salad burnet (Sanguisorba minor), an herb used in salads and herbal teas.
burney
burnie
burnie
noun
(Scotland) A small brook.
busine
busine
noun
Alternative form of buisine
busmen
busmen
noun
plural of busman
butane
butane
noun
(organic chemistry) A hydrocarbon (either of the two isomers of C₄H₁₀ n-butane, and 2-methyl-propane) found in gaseous petroleum fractions.
(organic chemistry, uncountable) The n-butane isomer only.
butein
butene
butene
noun
(chemistry) Any of several forms of butylene.
butine
butner
butyne
butyne
noun
(organic chemistry) Either of two isomeric acetylenes containing four carbon atoms and a triple bond, with the empirical formula (C₄H₆)
buxine
buxine
noun
(organic chemistry) An alkaloid obtained from the Buxus sempervirens, or common box tree, identical with bebeerine.
buzane
cangue
cangue
noun
A heavy wooden collar or yoke borne on the shoulders and enclosing the neck and arms, formerly used in China to punish petty criminals.
canute
census
census
noun
An official count or enumeration of members of a population (not necessarily human), usually residents or citizens in a particular region, often done at regular intervals.
Count, tally.
verb
(intransitive) To collect a census.
(transitive) To conduct a census on.
centum
centum
adj
(Indo-European studies) Referring to an Indo-European language that did not produce sibilants from a series of Proto-Indo-European palatovelar stops.
noun
(India) Perfect score on a board exam.
(Sanskrit and other Indian philology) Satakam, set of one hundred verses connected by the same metre or topic.
cheung
cinque
cinque
noun
(dice games, card games, dominoes) A card, die, or domino with five spots or pips.
cohune
cohune
noun
A species of palm, Attalea cohune, native to South America, that produces large nuts.
condue
conule
conule
noun
(dentistry) A small cusp
A conical elevation of the surface of some sponges
conure
conure
noun
Any of many cute New World parakeets of the former genus Conurus, now reassigned to other genera in subfamily Arinae, principally Psittacara and Eupsittula.
counce
cruent
crumen
cubane
cubane
noun
(organic chemistry) One of the Platonic hydrocarbons, C₈H₈, having the carbon atoms placed at the vertices of a cube.
cudden
cudden
noun
(obsolete) A clown; a low rustic; a dolt.
The coalfish.
cueing
cueing
verb
present participle of cue
cueman
cueman
noun
One who plays a cue sport.
cuemen
cuemen
noun
plural of cueman
cuenca
cullen
culmen
culmen
noun
(zoology) The dorsal ridge of a bird's bill.
Top; summit.
cumene
cumene
noun
(organic chemistry) The aromatic hydrocarbon isopropyl benzene present in petroleum.
cumine
cuneal
cuneal
adj
(anatomy) Relating to the cuneus.
shaped like a wedge; cuneiform
cuneus
cuneus
noun
(architecture) One of a set of wedge-shaped divisions separated by stairways, found in the Ancient Roman theatre and in mediaeval architecture.
(entomology) A wedge-shaped section of the forewing of certain heteropteran bugs.
(neuroanatomy) A portion of the occipital lobe of the human brain, involved in visual processing.
cunjer
cunner
cunner
noun
A marine European fish (Symphodus melops).
The related American conner (Tautogolabrus adspersus).
cunyie
cunzie
cuppen
curine
curney
curnie
curren
cursen
danieu
danube
danube
Proper noun
A river of Europe, which arises in Germany, and flows 2850 km (1775 miles) to the Black Sea in Romania.
A city/town in Minnesota, US.
A town in New York, US.
dauner
dauner
verb
(Scotland) Alternative form of daunder (“stroll”)
debunk
debunk
verb
(transitive) To discredit, or expose to ridicule the falsehood or the exaggerated claims of something.
dengue
dengue
noun
An acute febrile disease of the (sub)tropics caused by the Dengue virus, a flavivirus, transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes, and characterized by high fever, rash, headache, and severe muscle and joint pain.
densus
denude
denude
verb
To divest of all covering; to make bare or naked; to strip.
detenu
detune
detune
verb
(electronics) To alter the capacitance of a circuit such that its resonant frequency differs from the incoming frequency.
(music) To intentionally lower or raise the pitch produced by a musical instrument. Often done to produce sounds not normally possible, or in the case of stringed instruments to reduce tension for the purposes of shipping or maintenance.
deturn
deturn
verb
(obsolete) To turn away; to divert.
deunam
deurne
deusan
deuton
deuton
noun
(dated) deuteron
deuzan
diurne
doerun
donelu
douane
douane
noun
A custom house.
dudden
dudeen
dudeen
noun
A short-stemmed Irish pipe made out of clay.
dudgen
dudgen
adj
(obsolete) Contemptible.
noun
(obsolete) Something worthless; trash.
dudine
dudine
noun
(obsolete) A woman who is very concerned about her dress and appearance; a female dude.
duenas
duende
duende
noun
A small, mischievous humanoid creature in Iberian (Spanish/Portuguese), Latin American, and Philippine folklore/mythology; an imp.
Personal charm.
duenna
duenna
noun
a chaperon of a young lady, usually an older woman.
a governess or nanny.
dunces
dunces
noun
plural of dunce
dundee
dunder
dunder
noun
(Australia) Distillery effluent.
(Caribbean) The lees or dregs of cane juice, used in the distillation of rum.
(programming, informal) A double underscore, __.
dunged
dunged
verb
simple past tense and past participle of dung
dunger
dunger
noun
(Australia, New Zealand) An old, worn-out machine, especially a car.
(obsolete) A person employed in the dunging of textiles.
(obsolete) A person employed to spread or transport dung.
(obsolete) An animal that produces dung.
dunite
dunite
noun
A type of igneous rock with a coarse-grained or phaneritic texture.
dunked
dunked
verb
simple past tense and past participle of dunk
dunker
dunker
noun
(basketball) A person tasked with performing or training others in slam dunks.
(naval) A kind of sonobuoy.
A biscuit that is suitable for dunking in a cup of tea.