| ABLING | • abling v. Present participle of able. • ABLE v. (obsolete) to enable. |
| BALING | • baling v. Present participle of bale. • baling n. A collection of material packaged into a bale. • BALING n. the act of making into a bale. |
| BANGLE | • bangle n. A rigid bracelet or anklet, especially one with no clasp. • bangle v. (Transitive, obsolete) to beat about or beat down, as corn by the wind. • bangle v. (Obsolete or dialectal) to waste away little by little; squander carelessly; fritter (away). |
| BELONG | • belong v. (Intransitive) To have its proper place. • belong v. (Intransitive, followed by to) To be part of, or the property of. • belong v. (Intransitive, followed by to) To be the spouse or partner of. (Can we add an example for this sense?) |
| BILING | • BILE v. (Scots) to boil. |
| BINGLE | • bingle n. (Australia, informal) A minor collision, especially between motor vehicles. • bingle n. A hairstyle for women that is somewhere between a bob and a shingle. • bingle v. To arrange the hair in this style. |
| BLINGS | • BLING v. to adopt a flamboyant appearance. |
| BLINGY | • blingy adj. (Slang) shiny, glittery. • BLINGY adj. bling, flashy. |
| BLUING | • bluing v. Present participle of blue. • bluing n. A substance used in laundry to whiten clothes. • bluing n. Any of several processes to protect steel against rust. |
| BLUNGE | • blunge v. (Pottery) To mix clay and water. • BLUNGE v. to mix clay with water. |
| BUNGLE | • bungle v. (Transitive) To incompetently perform (a task); to ruin (something) through incompetent action; to botch… • bungle v. (Intransitive) To act or work incompetently; to fumble. • bungle n. A botched or incompetently handled action or situation; a blunder. |
| GLOBIN | • globin n. (Biochemistry) Any globular protein that incorporates a globin fold. • globin n. (Biochemistry) One of several polypeptides that are the protein components of haemoglobin or myoglobin. • GLOBIN n. a protein constituent of haemoglobin. |
| GOBLIN | • goblin n. One of various hostile supernatural creatures, now especially (fantasy literature) a malevolent and… • GOBLin prop.n. (Britain, rail transport, informal) Acronym of Gospel Oak to Barking Line, a railway line in north London. • GOBLIN n. an unpleasant or mischievous sprite in the form of an old man, also GOBBELINE. |
| LOBING | • lobing n. A rounded projection; a lobe. • LOBING n. a division into lobes. |
| LUBING | • lubing v. Present participle of lube. • LUBE v. to lubricate. |
| OBLONG | • oblong adj. Having a length and width that are different; not square or circular. • oblong adj. (The addition of quotations indicative of this usage is being sought:) Roughly rectangular or elliptical. • oblong adj. (Bookmaking) Having the horizontal axis of a page longer than the vertical; In landscape orientation. |