| BACKROOM | • backroom n. A room near the rear of a premises, especially one that is only accessible to a privileged few and can… • backroom adj. Of, relating to, or happening in a backroom. • backroom adj. (Figurative) Characterized by secrecy or anonymity. |
| BARMKINS | • barmkins n. Plural of barmkin. • BARMKIN n. (archaic) a battlement or turret on the outer wall of a castle. |
| BEDMAKER | • bedmaker n. Someone who manufactures beds. • bedmaker n. (Cambridge University, formal or historical) A bedder. • BEDMAKER n. one who makes beds. |
| BISMARCK | • bismarck n. (North America) A dessert pastry… • Bismarck prop.n. A German family name. • Bismarck prop.n. Otto von Bismarck, one of the prominent German statesmen of the nineteenth century. |
| BOOKMARK | • bookmark n. A strip of material used to mark a place in a book. • bookmark n. (Computing) A record of the address of a file or Internet page, serving as a shortcut to it. • bookmark n. (Databases) A pointer found in a nonclustered index to a row in a clustered index or a table heap. |
| BOOKWORM | • bookworm n. Any of various insects that infest books. • bookworm n. (Figurative) An avid book reader. • book-worm n. Alternative form of bookworm. |
| BRAKEMAN | • brakeman n. (US, rail transport) A railroad employee responsible for a train’s brakes, couplings etc. • brakeman n. (Mining, historical) A person employed to work the steam engine or other machinery that raises the coal from the mine. • brakeman n. (Sports) A person who pulls the brake lever in the sport of bobsleigh. |
| BRAKEMEN | • brakemen n. Plural of brakeman. • BRAKEMAN n. a man in charge of a brake or brakes. |
| BRINKMAN | • brinkman n. One who advocates for brinkmanship. • Brinkman prop.n. A surname. • BRINKMAN n. someone whose policy gets very close to war. |
| BRINKMEN | • brinkmen n. Plural of brinkman. • BRINKMAN n. someone whose policy gets very close to war. |
| BROCKRAM | • brockram n. A basal breccia of cemented limestone and sandstone fragments dating from the Permian period, found… • BROCKRAM n. (dialect) fragmented rock, breccia. |
| BUCKRAMS | • buckrams n. Alternative form of buckram ("ramson"). • buckrams v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of buckram. • BUCKRAM v. to pad or stiffen with buckram. |
| EMBANKER | • embanker n. One who embanks. • EMBANKER n. one who makes banks or dikes. |
| EMBARKED | • embarked v. Simple past tense and past participle of embark. • EMBARK v. to go on board ship, also IMBARK. |
| IMBARKED | • imbarked v. Simple past tense and past participle of imbark. • IMBARK v. to enclose in bark. |
| PEMBROKE | • Pembroke prop.n. A town in Pembrokeshire, Wales, Britain. • Pembroke prop.n. A city, the county seat of Bryan County, Georgia, United States. • Pembroke prop.n. A surname. |
| REEMBARK | • reembark v. Embark again. • reëmbark v. Alternative form of reembark. • re-embark v. Alternative form of reembark. |
| ZOMBORUK | • zomboruk n. Rare spelling of zamburak. • ZOMBORUK n. (Urdu) a small swivel-gun, esp. one mounted on the back of a camel, also ZAMBOORAK, ZUMBOORUK. |