| CANTERBURIES | • canterburies n. Plural of canterbury. • CANTERBURY n. a stand with divisions for holding books or music. |
| CENTERBOARDS | • centerboards n. Plural of centerboard. • center-boards n. Plural of center-board. • CENTERBOARD n. a retractable keel used esp. in sailboats, also CENTREBOARD. |
| COUNTERBASES | • COUNTERBASE n. (Italian) the double bass, also CONTRABASS, CONTRABASSO, CONTRABBASSO. |
| COUNTERBLAST | • counterblast n. A work that strongly refutes or criticises another. • COUNTERBLAST n. a defiant pronouncement or denunciation. |
| COUNTERBLOWS | • counterblows n. Plural of counterblow. • COUNTERBLOW n. a blow in return. |
| COUNTERBLUFF | • counterbluff n. A bluff made in response to an opponent’s bluff; a counterploy. • COUNTERBLUFF n. actions or words intended as a bluff, made in opposition to someone else's bluff. |
| COUNTERBONDS | • counterbonds n. Plural of counterbond. • COUNTERBOND n. a bond to protect a person who has given bond for another from contingent loss. |
| COUNTERBORED | • counterbored v. Simple past tense and past participle of counterbore. • COUNTERBORE v. to form a counterbore in. |
| COUNTERBORES | • counterbores n. Plural of counterbore. • COUNTERBORE v. to form a counterbore in. |
| COUNTERBRACE | • counterbrace v. (Nautical, transitive) To brace in opposite directions. • counterbrace v. (Engineering, transitive) To brace in such a way that opposite strains are resisted. • COUNTERBRACE v. to brace or fasten (the head-yards and after-yards) in opposite ways. |
| COUNTERBUFFS | • counterbuffs n. Plural of counterbuff. • COUNTERBUFF v. to rebuff. |
| INTERBEDDING | • interbedding v. Present participle of interbed. • interbedding n. (Geology) An interbedded formation. • INTERBEDDING n. the act of inserting between layers. |
| INTERBLENDED | • interblended v. Simple past tense and past participle of interblend. • INTERBLEND v. to blend together. |
| INTERBOROUGH | • interborough adj. Between boroughs. • INTERBOROUGH adj. between boroughs. |
| WINTERBOURNE | • winterbourne n. (Britain) A stream that only flows in winter or after wet weather, particularly in an area rich in limestone. • Winterbourne prop.n. Any of several villages in Britain. • Winterbourne prop.n. A surname from Old English. |