(figuratively) To stain or mar (for example with infamy or disgrace).
(specifically) To defecate on, to soil with excrement.
To entangle or run against so as to impede motion.
To make foul; to soil; to contaminate, pollute.
begoud
bejuco
bejuco
noun
Any climbing woody vine of the tropics with the habit of a liana; in the Philippines, especially any of various species of Calamus, the cane or rattan palm.
belout
belout
verb
(transitive, obsolete) To address or speak of with contemptuous language.
(transitive, obsolete) To call (someone) a lout.
beroun
besoul
besoul
verb
(transitive) To imbue or endow with a soul.
besour
besour
Verb
To make sour.
besugo
blouse
blouse
noun
(India) A short garment worn under a sari.
(fashion) A shirt for women or girls, particularly a shirt with buttons and often a collar; a dress shirt tailored for women.
(fashion, obsolete) A shirt, typically loose and reaching from the neck to the waist.
(military fashion) A loose-fitting uniform jacket.
Alternative form of blouze
Alternative form of blowess
Alternative form of blowze
verb
(military) To tuck one's pants/trousers (into one's boots).
To hang a garment in loose folds.
boelus
bogued
bogued
verb
simple past tense and past participle of bogue
boreum
boreus
bosque
bosque
noun
(Southwestern US) A gallery forest found growing along a river bank or on the flood plain of a watercourse.
Rare spelling of bosk.
bouake
bouche
bouche
noun
(obsolete) An allowance of food and drink for the tables of inferior officers or servants in a nobleman's palace or at court.
Alternative form of bush (a lining)
verb
Alternative form of bush (to line)
boucle
boucle
noun
Alternative spelling of bouclé
bouffe
bouffe
noun
(music) A comic opera
verb
(transitive) To make bouffant.
bougee
bouget
bouget
noun
(heraldry) A charge resembling the water bags that were used to supply the army in battle.
Obsolete form of budget.
bougie
bougie
adj
(Britain, Canada, slang) Fancy or good-looking, without the same connotations of snobbery or pretentiousness as in sense 1.
(chiefly African-American Vernacular, slang, usually derogatory) Behaving like or pertaining to people of a higher social status, middle-class / bourgeois people (sometimes carrying connotations of fakeness, elitism, or snobbery).
noun
(chiefly African-American Vernacular, slang, usually derogatory) A person who exhibits bougie behavior.
(medicine) A tapered cylindrical instrument for introducing an object into a tubular anatomical structure, or to dilate such a structure, as with an esophageal bougie.
A wax candle.
boules
boules
noun
bowls; a game played with metal balls.
plural of boule
bouley
boulez
boulle
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).
bourke
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.
bourre
bourse
bourse
noun
(botany) The swollen basal part of an inflorescence axis at the onset of fruit development; it bears leaves whose axillary buds differentiate and may grow out as shoots.
(figuratively) Any place, real or imagined, where the value of a thing is settled.
(philately) A meeting of stamp collectors and/or dealers, where stamps and covers are sold or exchanged.
A stock exchange.
boused
boused
verb
simple past tense and past participle of bouse
bouser
bouser
noun
Obsolete form of boozer.
bouses
bouses
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bouse
boutel
boutre
boutte
brogue
brogue
noun
(dated) A heavy shoe of untanned leather.
A strong Oxford shoe, with ornamental perforations and wing tips.
A strong dialectal accent. In Ireland it used to be a term for Irish spoken with a strong English accent, but gradually changed to mean English spoken with a strong Irish accent as English control of Ireland gradually increased and Irish waned as the standard language.
verb
(dialect) to fish for eels by disturbing the waters.
(intransitive) To walk.
(transitive) To kick.
(transitive) To punch a hole in, as with an awl.
(transitive, intransitive) To speak with a brogue (accent).
brouze
brouze
noun
Obsolete form of browse.
buboed
buboed
adj
Covered in buboes.
buboes
buboes
noun
plural of bubo
buenos
buoyed
buoyed
verb
simple past tense and past participle of buoy
buteos
buteos
noun
plural of buteo
courbe
cubero
debout
dobule
dobule
noun
(archaic) A common dace (Leuciscus leuciscus)
double
double
adj
(music) Of an instrument, sounding an octave lower.
(music) Of time, twice as fast.
Designed for two users.
False, deceitful, or hypocritical.
Folded in two; composed of two layers.
Having two aspects; ambiguous.
Made up of two matching or complementary elements.
Of a family relationship, related on both the maternal and paternal sides of a family.
Of flowers, having more than the normal number of petals.
Of twice the quantity.
Stooping; bent over.
adv
Twice over; twofold; doubly.
Two together; two at a time. (especially in see double)
noun
(Christianity) A double feast.
(baseball) A two-base hit.
(billiards) A strike in which the object ball is struck so as to make it rebound against the cushion to an opposite pocket.
(bridge) A call that increases certain scoring points if the last preceding bid becomes the contract.
(computing, programming) A double-precision floating-point number.
(darts) A hit on this ring.
(darts) The narrow outermost ring on a dartboard.
(dominoes) A tile that has the same value (i.e., the same number of pips) on both sides.
(historical) A former French coin worth one-sixth of a sou.
(historical, Guernsey) A copper coin worth one-eighth of a penny.
(music) Playing the same part on two instruments, alternately.
(rowing) A boat for two scullers.
(soccer) Two competitions, usually one league and one cup, won by the same team in a single season.
(sports) The feat of scoring twice in one game.
(sports, chiefly swimming and track) The feat of winning two events in a single meet or competition.
A bet on two horses in different races in which any winnings from the first race are placed on the horse in the later race.
A drink with two portions of alcohol.
A ghostly apparition of a living person; a doppelgänger.
A person who resembles and stands in for another person, often for safety purposes
A redundant item for which an identical item already exists.
A sharp turn, especially a return on one's own tracks.
Synonym of double-quick (“fast marching pace”)
Twice the number, amount, size, etc.
verb
(baseball) To get a two-base hit.
(billiards, snooker, pool) To cause (a ball) to rebound from a cushion before entering the pocket.
(bridge) To make a call that will double certain scoring points if the preceding bid becomes the contract.
(card games, intransitive) To double down.
(espionage, intransitive) To operate as a double agent.
(intransitive) To go or march at twice the normal speed.
(intransitive) To increase by 100%, to become twice as large in size.
(intransitive) To turn sharply, following a winding course.
(military) To unite, as ranks or files, so as to form one from each two.
(music) To duplicate (a part) either in unison or at the octave above or below it.
(music, intransitive, usually followed by "on") To be capable of performing (upon an additional instrument).
(nautical) To sail around (a headland or other point).
(radio, informal, of a station) To transmit simultaneously on the same channel as another station, either unintentionally or deliberately, causing interference.
(theater) To play (both one part and another, in the same play, etc).
(transitive with as) To serve a second role or have a second purpose.
(transitive) (often followed by together or up) To join or couple.
(transitive) (sometimes followed by up) To clench (a fist).
(transitive) To fold over so as to make two folds.
(transitive) To multiply by two.
(transitive) To multiply the strength or effect of by two.
(transitive) To repeat exactly; copy.
(transitive, intransitive, sometimes with "for") To act as substitute for (another theatrical performer in a certain role, etc).
To be the double of; to exceed by twofold; to contain or be worth twice as much as.
dubose
embudo
euboea
euboic
gunebo
lobule
lobule
noun
(anatomy) A small lobe; a subdivision of a lobe.
(botany) In liverworts with bilobed leaves, the smaller of the two lobes, sometimes modified to form a sac.
obduce
obduce
verb
(obsolete) To draw over, as a covering.
obdure
obdure
adj
(obsolete) Synonym of obdurate
verb
(obsolete) To harden.
obelus
obelus
noun
(historical) A symbol resembling a horizontal line (–), sometimes together with one or two dots (for example, ⨪ or ÷), which was used in ancient manuscripts and texts to mark a word or passage as doubtful or spurious, or redundant; an obelisk.
A dagger symbol (†), which is used in printed matter as a reference mark to refer the reader to a footnote, marginal note, etc.; beside a person's name to indicate that the person is deceased; or beside a date to indicate that it is a person's death date; an obelisk.
objure
objure
verb
(rare) To swear an oath.
obtuse
obtuse
adj
(botany, zoology) Blunt, or rounded at the extremity.
(geometry, by ellipsis) Obtuse-angled, having an obtuse angle.
(geometry, specifically, of an angle) Larger than one, and smaller than two right angles, or more than 90° and less than 180°.
(now chiefly botany, zoology) Blunt; not sharp, pointed, or acute in form.
Indirect or circuitous.
Intellectually dull or dim-witted.
Of sound, etc.: deadened, muffled, muted.
verb
(transitive, obsolete) To dull or reduce an emotion or a physical state.
ourebi
ourebi
noun
Alternative form of oribi (“type of antelope”) (Ourebia ourebi)
outbeg
outbeg
verb
To surpass in begging.
outbye
outbye
adv
(mining) In the direction away from the coal face.
A short distance away.
Outside.
pueblo
pueblo
noun
A community in Spain or Spanish America, especially one of Pueblo Indians living in a stone or adobe multi-storey building.
rebuoy
rouble
rouble
noun
Alternative spelling of ruble
touber
tourbe
tubboe
tuebor
tunebo
umbone
umbone
noun
Synonym of umbo
unbone
unbone
verb
(obsolete) To twist about, as if boneless.
To deprive of bones, as meat; to bone.
unrobe
unrobe
verb
(transitive, intransitive) To disrobe, to undress.