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Collins Primary Illustrated Dictionary
Collins Primary Illustrated Dictionary
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Collins Primary Illustrated Dictionary

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ADJECTIVE 1 difficult to deal with • an awkward situation

2 clumsy and uncomfortable • The large bag was awkward to carry.

[from Old Norse ofugr meaning turned the wrong way]

axe axes

NOUN a tool with a handle and a sharp blade, used for chopping wood

axis axes

NOUN 1 an imaginary line through the middle of something, around which it moves • The earth turns on its axis.

2 one of the two sides of a graph

axle axles

NOUN the long bar that connects a pair of wheels on a vehicle

Bb (#ulink_1434220a-b1fe-5066-8200-ff7d7a82d89e)

babble babbles, babbling, babbled

VERB If someone babbles, they talk in a quick and confused way that is difficult to understand.

baboon baboons

NOUN an African monkey with a pointed face, large teeth and a long tail

baby babies

NOUN a child in the first year or two of its life

baby-sit baby-sits, baby-sitting, baby-sat

VERB If you baby-sit for someone, you look after their children while they are out.

bachelor bachelors

NOUN a man who has never been married

back backs, backing, backed

ADVERB 1 When people or things move back, they move in the opposite direction to the one they are facing.

2 When you go back to a place or situation, you return to it. • She went back to sleep.

NOUN 3 the rear part of your body

ADJECTIVE 4 The back parts of something are the ones at the rear. • the dog’s back legs

VERB 5 If a building backs on to something, the back of it faces in that direction.

backbone backbones

NOUN the column of linked bones along the middle of the back of a human and other vertebrates

background backgrounds

NOUN 1 the things in a picture or scene that are less noticeable than the main things

2 the kind of home you come from, and your education and experience

backstroke

NOUN a style of swimming movement on your back

backward

ADJECTIVE If you take a backward look, you look behind you.

backwards

ADVERB 1 If you move backwards, you move to a place behind you.

2 If you do something backwards, you do it opposite to the usual way. • He told them to count backwards from 20 to 5.

bacon

NOUN meat from the back or sides of a pig, which has been salted or smoked

bacteria

PLURAL NOUN very tiny organisms that can cause disease

[from Greek bakterion meaning little rod; some bacteria are rod-shaped]

bacterial ADJECTIVE

bad worse, worst

ADJECTIVE 1 Bad things are harmful or upsetting. • I have some bad news.

SYNONYMS: distressing, grave, terrible

2 not enough or of poor quality • We thought the film was very bad.

3 Bad food is not fresh.

SYNONYMS: rotten, decayed

badge badges

NOUN a piece of plastic or metal with a design or message on it that you can pin to your clothes

badger badgers, badgering, badgered

NOUN 1 a nocturnal mammal that has a white head with two black stripes on it

VERB 2 If you badger someone, you keep asking them questions or pestering them to do something.

badly worse, worst

ADVERB 1 not well, poorly • The script was badly written.

2 seriously • She was badly hurt in the accident.

badminton

NOUN a game in which two or four players use rackets to hit a feathered object, called a shuttlecock, over a high net

bag bags

NOUN a container for carrying things in

[From Old Norse baggi meaning bundle]

baggage

NOUN Your baggage is all the suitcases, holdalls and bags that you take with you when you travel.

bagpipes

PLURAL NOUN a musical instrument played by squeezing air out of a leather bag and through pipes

baguette baguettes

NOUN a long, thin French loaf of bread

bail bails

NOUN 1 In cricket, the bails are the two small pieces of wood placed on top of the stumps to form the wicket.

2 a sum of money paid to a court to allow an accused person to go free until the time of the trial • The accused man was released on bail.

bait baits, baiting, baited

NOUN 1 a small amount of food placed on a hook, or in a trap, to attract and catch a fish or wild animal

VERB 2 If you bait a hook or a trap, you put some food on it to catch a fish or wild animal.

bake bakes, baking, baked

VERB 1 When you bake food, you cook it in an oven without using extra liquid or fat.

2 If you bake earth or clay, you heat it until it becomes hard.

baker bakers

NOUN a person who makes and sells bread and cakes

balance balances, balancing, balanced

VERB 1 When someone or something balances, they remain steady and do not fall over.

2 used in mathematics when weighing and comparing two weights. If two weights are equal, they balance.

NOUN 3 the state of being upright and steady • She lost her balance and fell.

4 the amount of money in someone’s bank account

balcony balconies

NOUN 1 a platform on the outside of a building, with a wall or railing round it

2 an area of upstairs seats in a theatre or cinema

bald balder, baldest

ADJECTIVE A bald person has little or no hair on their head.

[from Middle English ballede meaning having a white patch]

bale bales, baling, baled

NOUN 1 a large bundle of something, such as paper or hay, tied tightly

VERB 2 If you bale water from a boat, you remove it using a container; also spelt bail.

ball balls

NOUN 1 a round object used in games such as tennis, soccer, and hockey

2 The ball of your foot or thumb is the rounded part where your toes join your foot or your thumb joins your hand.

ballad ballads

NOUN 1 a long song or poem that tells a story