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

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VERB 1 If you believe that something is true, you think that it is true.

2 If you believe someone, you accept that they are telling the truth.

bell bells

NOUN 1 a cup-shaped metal object with a piece inside it called a clapper that hits the side and makes a ringing sound

2 an electrical device that you can ring or buzz to get attention

bellow bellows, bellowing, bellowed

VERB If a human or other animal bellows, they shout very loudly or make a very loud, deep noise like a roar.

belly bellies

NOUN the part of your body, especially your stomach, that holds and digests food

belong belongs, belonging, belonged

VERB 1 If something belongs to you, it is yours and you own it.

2 If you belong to a group, you are a member of it.

3 If something belongs in a particular place, that is where it should be. • That book belongs on the top shelf.

belongings

PLURAL NOUN Your belongings are all the things that you own.

below

PREPOSITION OR ADVERB 1 If something is below something else, it is in a lower position. • We could hear music coming up from the flat two floors below.

ANTONYM: above

2 If something is below a particular amount or level, it is less than it. • below average rainfall

ANTONYM: above

belt belts

NOUN a strip of leather or cloth that you fasten round your waist to hold your trousers or skirt up

bench benches

NOUN a long seat that two or more people can sit on

bend bends, bending, bent

VERB 1 When you bend something, you use force to make it curved or angular.

2 When you bend, you move your head and shoulders forwards and downwards. • I bent over to pick up my glasses.

NOUN 3 a curved part of something • a bend in the road

beneath

PREPOSITION OR ADVERB FORMAL underneath

benefit benefits, benefiting, benefited

NOUN 1 the advantage that something brings to people • the benefit of a good education

VERB 2 If you benefit from something, it helps you. • He’ll benefit from some extra tuition.

[from Latin benefactum meaning good deed]

bent

ADJECTIVE curved or twisted out of shape

bereaved

ADJECTIVE FORMAL You say that someone is bereaved when a close relative of theirs has recently died.

bereavement NOUN

berry berries

NOUN a small, round fruit that grows on bushes or trees

berserk

ADVERB If somebody goes berserk, they lose control of themselves and become extremely violent.

[from Icelandic berserkr meaning a Viking who wore a shirt made from the skin of a bear and who worked himself into a mad frenzy before going into battle]

berth berths

NOUN 1 a space in a harbour where a ship stays when it is being loaded or unloaded

2 In a boat or caravan, a berth is a bed.

PHRASE 3 If you give someone or something a wide berth, you avoid them because they are unpleasant or dangerous.

beside

PREPOSITION If one thing is beside another thing, it is next to it.

besides

ADVERB also or in addition to

best

ADJECTIVE 1 the superlative of good and well • That was one of the best films I’ve ever seen.

ANTONYM: worst

ADVERB 2 The thing that you like best is the thing that you prefer to everything else.

bet bets, betting, bet

VERB If you bet on the result of an event, you will win money if what you bet on happens and lose money if it does not.

betray betrays, betraying, betrayed

VERB If you betray someone who trusts you, you tell people something secret about them.

better

ADJECTIVE 1 the comparative of good and well • I am feeling better today.

2 If you are better after an illness, you are no longer ill.

SYNONYM: cured

between

PREPOSITION OR ADVERB 1 If something is between two other things, it is situated or happens in the space or time that separates them. • He was head teacher between 1989 and 2000.

2 A relationship or a difference between two people or two things is one that involves them both. • the difference between frogs and toads

beware

VERB If you tell someone to beware of something, you are warning them that it might be dangerous or harmful.

bewilder bewilders, bewildering, bewildered

VERB If something bewilders you, it confuses and muddles you so that you can’t understand.

bewilderment NOUN

beyond

PREPOSITION 1 If something is beyond a certain place, it is on the other side of it. • Beyond the mountains was the secret valley.

2 If something is beyond you, you cannot do it or understand it.

bi-

PREFIX added to a word to mean two or twice. For example, someone who is bilingual can speak two languages.

bib bibs

NOUN a piece of cloth or plastic put under a baby’s chin to protect its clothes from stains

Bible Bibles

NOUN the sacred book of the Christian religion • I read about Noah and the Ark in the Bible.

bibliography bibliographies

NOUN a list of books or articles

bicycle bicycles

NOUN a two-wheeled vehicle that you ride by pushing two pedals with your feet

bid bids, bidding, bid

VERB If you bid for something, you offer to buy it for a certain sum of money. • He bid for an old bike at the auction.

big bigger, biggest

ADJECTIVE large or important

ANTONYMS: small, tiny, little

bike bikes

NOUN an abbreviation for bicycle

bikini bikinis

NOUN a small, two-piece swimming costume worn by women

bilingual

ADJECTIVE involving or using two languages • bilingual street signs

[from Latin bis meaning two and lingua meaning tongue]

bill bills

NOUN 1 a written statement of how much is owed for goods or services • a phone bill

2 a formal statement of a proposed new law that is discussed and then voted on in Parliament