| BARESTHESIA | • baresthesia n. Barognosis. • BARESTHESIA n. the sense of pressure, also BARAESTHESIA. |
| BREATHINESS | • breathiness n. The state or quality of being breathy. • breathiness n. The result or product of being breathy. • BREATHINESS n. the state of being breathy. |
| BROADSHEETS | • broadsheets n. Plural of broadsheet. • BROADSHEET n. a newspaper of large format, measuring approximately 40 by 60 cm. (about 16 by 24 in.); a quality newspaper. |
| BUTCHNESSES | • BUTCHNESS n. the state of being butch. |
| ESTABLISHED | • established v. Simple past tense and past participle of establish. • established adj. Having been in existence for a long time and therefore recognized and generally accepted. • established adj. Of a religion, church etc.: formally recognized by a state as being official within that area. |
| ESTABLISHER | • establisher n. A person who establishes something. • ESTABLISHER n. one who establishes. |
| ESTABLISHES | • establishes v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of establish. • ESTABLISH v. to settle or fix, also STABLISH. |
| HARTEBEESTS | • hartebeests n. Plural of hartebeest. • HARTEBEEST n. (South African) a large South African antelope, also HARTBEES, HARTBEEST. |
| MESOBENTHOS | • MESOBENTHOS n. flora and fauna living at the bottom of seas 182 to 914 metres deep. |
| NEBBISHIEST | • NEBBISHY adj. like a nebbish, wimpy. |
| PHLEBITISES | • PHLEBITIS n. inflammation of a vein. |
| REESTABLISH | • reestablish v. (Transitive) To establish again. • reestablish v. (Transitive) To restore to a previously operational state. (Can we add an example for this sense?) • reëstablish v. Alternative spelling of reestablish. |
| SABRETACHES | • sabretaches n. Plural of sabretache. • SABRETACHE n. (French) a satchel suspended from a cavalry officer's belt. |
| STEEPLEBUSH | • steeplebush n. A plant with narrow pyramidal clusters of flowers and a dense woolly tomentum. • STEEPLEBUSH n. another name for hardhack. |
| WHITEBASSES | • WHITEBASS n. a silvery food fish of the American Great Lakes region. |