A type of enclosed garden common in south and south-eastern Asia.
bago
bagr
bags
bags
intj
Used to claim something for oneself, especially in the combination 'Bags I'.
noun
(often in the phrase 'bags of') A large quantity.
(slang) Loose-fitting trousers.
plural of bag
verb
(Australia, New Zealand, Ireland) To reserve for oneself.
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bag
bang
bang
adv
Precisely.
Right, directly.
With a sudden impact.
intj
A sudden percussive sound, such as made by the firing of a gun, slamming of a door, etc.
noun
(Ireland, colloquial, slang) strong smell (of)
(US, archaic) Synonym of bangs: hair hanging over the forehead, especially a hairstyle with such hair cut straight across.
(chiefly US) The symbol !, known as an exclamation point.
(mathematics) A factorial, in mathematics, because the factorial of n is often written as n!
(slang) A thrill.
(slang) An injection, a shot (of a narcotic drug).
(slang, US, Boston area) An abrupt left turn.
(slang, mining) An explosive product.
(vulgar, slang) An act of sexual intercourse.
A strike upon an object causing such a noise.
A sudden percussive noise.
Alternative form of bhang (“cannabis”)
An explosion.
An offbeat figure typical of reggae songs and played on guitar and piano.
verb
(finance, transitive, dated) To depress the prices in (a market).
(intransitive) To make sudden loud noises, and often repeatedly, especially by exploding or hitting something.
(slang, transitive, intransitive, vulgar) To engage in sexual intercourse.
(slang, transitive, obsolete) To excel or surpass.
(transitive) To cut squarely across, as the tail of a horse, or a person's forelock; to cut (the hair).
(transitive, intransitive) To hit hard.
(transitive, slang, drugs) To inject intravenously.
(with "in") To hammer or to hit anything hard.
bega
bega
noun
Alternative form of bigha
bego
bego
noun
That which besets, surrounds, compasses, or affects; situation; circumstance.
verb
(archaic) To go about; encompass; surround; beset, surround with hostile intent; to overrun.
(obsolete except in set phrases) To affect, usually as a good or bad influence, or as a circumstance.
(obsolete) To clothe, dress.
(rare, humoristic or faux-archaic) To go away, to disappear.
begs
begs
noun
plural of beg
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of beg
belg
beng
berg
berg
noun
(chiefly South Africa) mountain
An iceberg.
bglr
biga
biga
noun
(historical) A Roman racing chariot drawn by two horses abreast.
bigg
bigg
noun
A kind of barley.
verb
(transitive, obsolete, Scotland, Northumbria) To build.
bing
bing
intj
(onomatopoeia) The high-pitched sound made by a bell being struck
(onomatopoeia) The sound made by a bounce, or by striking a metallic surface
noun
(Britain, chiefly Scotland) A heap or pile, especially of metallic ore
(chiefly Scotland) A slag heap, i.e. a man-made mound or heap formed with the waste material (slag) as a by-product of coal mining or the shale oil industry
(chiefly Scotland) The waste by-product from a foundry or furnace, formed into such a mound
(prison slang, with "the") Solitary confinement
A bounce.
The sound made by a bell, an onomatopœia.
The sound made by a bounce.
verb
(dated slang or dialectal) To go; walk; come; run
To bounce.
biog
biog
noun
(informal) A biography.
bkgd
bldg
boga
bogo
bogs
bogs
noun
plural of bog
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bog
bogy
bogy
noun
Alternative form of bogey
Alternative form of bogie
bong
bong
noun
(ethnic slur) An Australian Aboriginal person.
(slang) Doorbell chimes.
(slang) The clang of a large bell.
A device for rapidly consuming beer, usually consisting of a funnel or reservoir of beer and a length of tubing.
A very wide piton.
A vessel, usually made of glass or ceramic and filled with water, used in smoking various substances; especially marijuana.
Alternative spelling of bung (“purse”)
An act of smoking one serving of drugs from a bong.
verb
(slang) To pull a bell.
(slang) To ring a doorbell.
To smoke a bong.
borg
borg
noun
cyborg
verb
Alternative spelling of Borg
boyg
boyg
noun
Formless hindrances personified as an enemy
brag
brag
adj
(archaic) Brisk; full of spirits; boasting; pretentious; conceited.
a woundy, brag young fellow
adv
(obsolete) proudly; boastfully
noun
(by ellipsis) The card game three card brag.
A boast or boasting; bragging; ostentatious pretence or self-glorification.
The thing which is boasted of.
verb
(intransitive) To boast; to talk with excessive pride about what one has, is able to do, or has done; often as an attempt to popularize oneself.
(US) A jail or guardhouse, especially in a naval military prison or jail on a ship, navy base, or (in fiction) spacecraft.
(nautical) A two-masted vessel, square-rigged on both foremast and mainmast
Brigadier.
brog
brog
noun
A pointed instrument, such as a joiner's awl.
verb
(transitive) To prod with a pointed instrument, such as a lance; to prick or pierce.
To broggle.
bsge
bugi
bugs
bugs
adj
(slang) Crazy; unstable.
noun
plural of bug
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bug
bulg
bung
bung
adj
(Australia, New Zealand, slang) Broken, not in working order.
noun
(UK, slang, obsolete) The landlord of a public house.
(obsolete, UK, thieves' cant) A purse.
(obsolete, slang) A sharper or pickpocket.
(slang) A bribe.
A stopper, alternative to a cork, often made of rubber, used to prevent fluid passing through the neck of a bottle, vat, a hole in a vessel etc.
The cecum or anus, especially of a slaughter animal.
The orifice in the bilge of a cask through which it is filled; bunghole.
verb
(UK, Australia, transitive, informal) To put or throw something without care; to chuck.
(transitive) To batter, bruise; to cause to bulge or swell.
(transitive) To pass a bribe.
(transitive) To plug, as with a bung.
burg
burg
noun
(Canada, US) A city or town.
(historical) A fortified town in medieval Europe.
(slang) burger
bygo
byng
cegb
egba
egbo
gabe
gabi
gabo
gabs
gabs
noun
plural of gab
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gab
gaby
gaby
noun
(UK, regional) A stupid, foolish person; a simpleton; a dunce.
gamb
gamb
noun
(heraldry) The leg or shank of an animal, especially of a lion, on a coat of arms, crest, etc.
garb
garb
noun
(figurative) A guise, external appearance.
(heraldry) A wheat sheaf.
A measure of arrows in the Middle Ages.
A type of dress or clothing.
Fashion, style of dressing oneself up.
verb
(transitive) To dress in garb.
gaub
gbip
gelb
gerb
gerb
noun
A firework that produces a fountain of sparks
gibb
gibb
Proper noun
derived from a diminutive of the name Gilbert.
gibe
gibe
noun
Alternative spelling of gybe
Alternative spelling of jibe (“facetious or insulting remark”)
verb
Alternative spelling of jibe
gibs
gibs
noun
(slang, derogatory) Government welfare, assistance or handouts.
(video games) The internal organs of certain computer game characters after being splattered to death.
plural of gib
verb
(dialectal, rare) Pronunciation spelling of give.
(dialectal, rare) Pronunciation spelling of gives.
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gib
glib
glib
adj
(US) Snarky or unserious in a disrespectful way.
(dated) Smooth or slippery.
Artfully persuasive but insincere in nature; smooth-talking, honey-tongued, silver-tongued.
Having a ready flow of words but lacking thought or understanding; superficial; shallow.
noun
(historical) A mass of matted hair worn down over the eyes, formerly used in Ireland.
verb
(obsolete) To castrate; to geld; to emasculate.
(transitive) To make smooth or slippery.
glob
glob
noun
(biology) A millimeter-sized colour module found beyond the visual area V2 in the brain's parvocellular pathway.
(programming) A limited pattern matching technique using wildcards, less powerful than a regular expression.
A round, shapeless or amorphous lump, as of a semisolid substance.
verb
(programming) To carry out pattern matching using a glob.
To stick in globs or lumps.
glub
glub
noun
(informal) The sound of underwater bubbles, or of water bubbling (often used repetitively).
verb
(informal) To make a sound like underwater bubbling; to glug.
gmbh
gobi
gobi
noun
(India, cooking) cauliflower
gobo
gobo
noun
(film, photography, television) A screen (often in disc form) placed between a light and an illuminated actor or object in order to diffuse the glare.
(sound engineering) A device used to shield a microphone from extraneous sounds.
(theater) A template inserted over a light source to control the shape of the thrown light.
The taproot of young edible burdock plants (Arctium lappa), eaten as a root vegetable.
gobs
gobs
noun
plural of gob
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gob
goby
goby
noun
A gudgeon, such as Gobio gobio.
Any of various small fish from the large family Gobiidae, in which the pelvic fins are fused to form a disc-shaped sucker.
gorb
gpib
grab
grab
noun
(countable) A mechanical device that grabs or clutches.
(countable) A sudden snatch at something.
(countable) An acquisition by violent or unjust means.
(countable, media) A sound bite.
(obsolete) That which is seized.
(uncountable) A simple card game.
A device for withdrawing drills, etc., from artesian and other wells that are drilled, bored, or driven.
A two- or three-masted vessel used on the Malabar coast.
verb
(informal) To consume something quickly.
(informal) To quickly collect or retrieve.
(intransitive) To make a sudden grasping or clutching motion (at something).
(transitive) To grip suddenly; to seize; to clutch.
(transitive) To grip the attention of; to enthrall or interest.
To restrain someone; to arrest.
To take the opportunity of.
greb
grub
grub
noun
(Australia, slang) A despicable person; a lowlife.
(Australia, slang) A dirty person.
(countable) An insect at an immature stage of its life cycle.
(obsolete) A short, thick man; a dwarf.
(uncountable, slang) Food.
verb
(slang, dated) To eat.
(slang, dated, transitive) To supply with food.
(transitive, intransitive) To dig; to dig up by the roots; to root out by digging; often followed by up.
To scavenge or in some way scrounge, typically for food.
guib
guib
noun
The harnessed antelope (Tragelaphus scriptus), a West African antelope marked with white stripes and spots on a reddish fawn ground;.
gybe
gybe
noun
(by extension) A sudden change in approach or direction; vacillation.
A manoeuvre in which the stern of a sailing vessel crosses the wind, typically resulting in the forceful and sudden sweep of the boom from one side of the vessel to the other.
A sudden shift of a sail's angle, or a sudden change in the direction that a vessel is sailing in.
Alternative spelling of jibe (“taunt”)
verb
(by extension, obsolete) Often as gybe at: to balk, hesitate, or vacillate when faced with a course of action, plan, or proposal.
(intransitive, nautical) Generally of a small sailing vessel: to change tack with the wind crossing behind the vessel.
(intransitive, nautical) Of a fore-and-aft sail or its boom: to shift, often forcefully and suddenly, from one side of a sailing vessel to the other.
(transitive, nautical) To shift a fore-and-aft sail from one side of a sailing vessel to the other, while sailing before the wind.