Third-person singular simple present indicative form of beef
beefy
beefy
adj
(informal) Strong or muscular.
(informal) Sturdy; robust.
Containing beef.
Large; overweight; fat.
Similar to, or tasting like beef.
befan
befit
befit
verb
to be fit for
befog
befog
verb
To confuse, mystify (a person); to make less acute or perceptive, to cloud (a person’s faculties).
To envelop in fog or smoke.
To obscure, make less clear (a subject, issue, etc.).
befop
befur
befur
verb
(transitive) To cover or clothe with fur.
bifer
brief
brief
adj
(obsolete) Rife; common; prevalent.
Concise; taking few words.
Occupying a small distance, area or spatial extent; short.
Of short duration; happening quickly.
adv
(obsolete, poetic) Briefly.
(obsolete, poetic) Soon; quickly.
noun
(English law) The material relevant to a case, delivered by a solicitor to the barrister who is counsel for the case.
(English law, slang) A barrister who is counsel for a party in a legal action.
(UK, historical) A letter patent, from proper authority, authorizing a collection or charitable contribution of money in churches, for any public or private purpose.
(by extension, figurative) A position of interest or advocacy.
(law) A memorandum of points of fact or of law for use in conducting a case.
(law) A writ summoning one to answer; an official letter or mandate.
(law) An answer to any action.
(law) An attorney's legal argument in written form for submission to a court.
(obsolete) A summary, précis or epitome; an abridgement or abstract.
(slang) A ticket of any type.
(usually in the plural) underwear briefs.
A short news story or report.
verb
(transitive) To summarize a recent development to some person with decision-making power.
(transitive, law) To write a legal argument and submit it to a court.
buffe
buffe
noun
(historical) A piece of armor covering either the entire face, or the lower face together with a visor that covered the upper face, typically made of multiple lames that could be opened by being lowered (a falling buffe) or raised.
faber
fabes
fable
fable
noun
A fictitious narrative intended to enforce some useful truth or precept, usually with animals, etc. as characters; an apologue. Prototypically, Aesop's Fables.
Any story told to excite wonder; common talk; the theme of talk.
Fiction; untruth; falsehood.
The plot, story, or connected series of events forming the subject of an epic or dramatic poem.
verb
(intransitive, archaic) To compose fables; hence, to write or speak fiction; to write or utter what is not true.
(transitive, archaic) To make up; to devise, and speak of, as true or real; to tell of falsely; to recount in the form of a fable.
fabre
fiber
fiber
noun
(category theory) The pullback of a morphism along a global element (called the fiber of the morphism over the global element).
(computing) A kind of lightweight thread of execution.
(countable) A single elongated piece of a given material, roughly round in cross-section, often twisted with other fibers to form thread.
(cytology) A long tubular cell found in bodily tissue.
(figuratively) Moral strength and resolve.
(mathematics) The preimage of a given point in the range of a map.
(textiles) A material whose length is at least 1000 times its width.
(uncountable) A material in the form of fibers.
Dietary fiber.
fibre
fibre
noun
(category theory) Said to be of a morphism over a global element: The pullback of the said morphism along the said global element.
(countable) A single piece of a given material, elongated and roughly round in cross-section, often twisted with other fibres to form thread.