A language spoken on this island and others near it.
bick
bike
bike
noun
(Scotland, Northern England) A hive of bees, or a nest of wasps, hornets, or ants.
(chiefly Scotland, by extension, collective) A crowd of people.
(slang, derogatory) Ellipsis of village bike.
Clipping of bicycle.
Clipping of motorbike.
verb
(intransitive) To ride a bike.
(intransitive) To travel by bike.
(transitive) To transport by bicycle.
bikh
bikh
noun
A virulent poison extracted from Aconitum ferox or other species of aconite.
The plant itself.
bilk
bilk
noun
(cribbage) The spoiling of someone's score in the crib.
(obsolete) A cheat or swindler.
(obsolete) A deception, a hoax.
verb
(intransitive, UK) To steal fuel from a self-service filling station by driving away without paying after filling the fuel tank or other container; to commit a drive-off.
(transitive) To do someone out of their due; to deceive or defraud, to cheat (someone).
(transitive) To spoil the score of (someone) in cribbage.
(transitive, archaic) To evade, elude.
bink
bink
noun
(UK, Northern England, Scotland, dialect) A bench.
birk
birk
noun
(Britain, slang) Alternative spelling of berk
(Northern England) A birch tree.
A Eurasian minnow (Phoxinus phoxinus, syn. Leuciscus phoxinus).
bisk
bisk
noun
(sports) Alternative form of bisque (“extra turn”)
Alternative form of bisque (“kind of soup”)
kibe
kibe
noun
(rare, archaic, now poetic or dialectal) A chilblain (often ulcerated), especially on the heel of the foot (also afflictive to some animals).