| BACKHOUSE | • backhouse n. (Now dialect) An outbuilding behind the main building. • backhouse n. (US, Canada, euphemistic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory. • Backhouse prop.n. A surname from Old English. |
| BAKEHOUSE | • bakehouse n. A building or an apartment used for the preparing and baking of bread and other baked goods. • bakehouse n. A building principally containing ovens. • bakehouse n. (UK dialectal) Bakery. |
| BRUSHWORK | • brushwork n. (Painting) The technique or practice of applying and manipulating paint (usually oil or gouache) in a painting. • BRUSHWORK n. work done with a brush; a painter's individual manner of using the brush. |
| BUCKHORNS | • buckhorns n. Plural of buckhorn. • BUCKHORN n. the material of a buck's horn as used for handles etc. |
| BUCKHOUND | • buckhound n. (UK) A hound for deer hunting. • BUCKHOUND n. a hound for hunting deer. |
| BUCKSHOTS | • buckshots n. Plural of buckshot. • BUCKSHOT n. a large kind of shot, used in shooting deer. |
| BUCKTHORN | • buckthorn n. Any of several, often thorny shrubs or small trees, especially. • BUCKTHORN n. a shrub of the Rhamnus genus. |
| BUCKTOOTH | • bucktooth n. An upper tooth that protrudes further than the bottom teeth. • BUCKTOOTH n. any tooth that juts out. |
| BUHLWORKS | • BUHLWORK n. (French) a form of marquetry with e.g. gold and silver inlaid in tortoiseshell, also BOULLE, BOULLEWORK, BUHL. |
| BUNKHOUSE | • bunkhouse n. A building providing sleeping quarters for workers or guests, especially in a rural setting. • BUNKHOUSE n. a place where cowboys etc. sleep. |
| ROUGHBACK | • ROUGHBACK n. a rough-skinned flatfish. |
| SMOKEBUSH | • smokebush n. Any of several Australian shrubs and trees, of the genus Conospermum, that have flowers in dense spikes. • SMOKEBUSH n. a plant with purple leaves and small flowers that turn grey-white before they fall. |
| TOUCHBACK | • touchback n. (American football) The result of a play (usually a kickoff or punt) in which the ball passes out the… • TOUCHBACK n. a play in which the ball is dead on or behind a team's own goal line, having been put across the line by an opponent but actually put down by a member of that team. |
| UNBOOKISH | • unbookish adj. Not bookish. • UNBOOKISH adj. not bookish. |