| bays | Baize | en |
| bays | plural of bay | en |
| bays | See Baize | en |
| bays | third-person singular of bay | en |
| bays | - Depression areas characterized by wet soils and swamp vegetation | en |
| bays | fame, renown isim | en |
| bays | internal compartments of a building; each divided from the other not by solid walls but by divisions only marked in the side walls (columns, pilasters, etc) or the ceiling (beams, etc) Also external divisions of a building by fenestration (windows) | en |
| bays | Repititive divisions into which a building is divided | en |
| bay | small arm of the sea where the shore curves inward; laurel (type of shrub); chamber, compartment; compartment containing a drive (Computers); howl of a hunting dog; dark reddish-brown color; bay-colored horse isim | en |
| Bay | A region of Somalia | en |
| bay | The laurel tree (Laurus nobilis) | en |
| bay | Hence, in the plural, an honorary garland or crown bestowed as a prize for victory or excellence, anciently made or consisting of branches of the laurel | en |
| bay | A tract covered with bay trees | en |
| bay | A kind of mahogany obtained from Campeachy Bay | en |
| bay | A berry, particularly of the laurel | en |
| bay | A principal compartment of the walls, roof, or other part of a building, or of the whole building, as marked off by the buttresses, vaulting, mullions of a window, etc | en |
| bay | A compartment in a barn, for depositing hay, or grain in the stalks | en |
| bay | To bark, as a dog with a deep voice does, at his game | en |
| bay | one of the main divisions of any structure, as the part of a bridge between two piers | en |
| bay | To bark at; hence, to follow with barking; to bring or drive to bay; as, to bay the bear | en |
| bay | a horse of a moderate reddish-brown color a compartment in an aircraft used for some specific purpose; "he opened the bomb bay" | en |
| bay | the sound of a hound on the scent an indentation of a shoreline larger than a cove but smaller than a gulf bark with prolonged noises, of dogs utter in deep prolonged tones (used of animals especially a horse) of a moderate reddish-brown color | en |
| bay | a horse of a moderate reddish-brown color a compartment in an aircraft used for some specific purpose; "he opened the bomb bay" a compartment on a ship between decks; often used as a hospital; "they put him in the sick bay" the sound of a hound on the scent an indentation of a shoreline larger than a cove but smaller than a gulf bark with prolonged noises, of dogs utter in deep prolonged tones (used of animals especially a horse) of a moderate reddish-brown color | en |
| bay | To dam, as water; with up or back | en |
| bay | To bathe | en |
| bay | Deep-toned, prolonged barking | en |
| bay | A state of being obliged to face an antagonist or a difficulty, when escape has become impossible | en |
| bay | A bank or dam to keep back water | en |
| bay | A recess or indentation shaped like a bay | en |
| bay | A small body of water set off from the main body; as a compartment containing water for a wheel; the portion of a canal just outside of the gates of a lock, etc | en |
| bay | The distance between two supports in a vault | en |
| bay | A bay platform | en |
| bay | A berry | en |
| bay | The excited barking of dogs when hunting or being attacked | en |
| bay | The leaf of this shrub, used as a herb | en |
| bay | To pursue noisily, like a pack of hounds | en |
| bay | To bark at | en |
| bay | To bark | en |
| bay | Each of the spaces, port and starboard, between decks, forward of the bitts, in sailing warships | en |
| bay | A body of water (especially the sea) more or less three-quarters surrounded by land | en |
| bay | Of a reddish-brown colour (especially of horses) | en |
| bay | Reddish brown; of the color of a chestnut; applied to the color of horses | en |
| bay | An inlet of the sea, usually smaller than a gulf, but of the same general character | en |
| bay | An internal recess; a compartment or area surrounded on three sides | en |
| bay | An opening in a wall, especially between two columns | en |
| bay | A brown colour/color of the coat of some horses | en |
| bay | The climactic confrontation between hunting-dogs and their prey | en |
| bay | A shrub of the family Lauraceae, having dark green leaves and berries | en |
| bay | The space between the primary frames measured parallel to the ridge | en |
| bay | a compartment on a ship between decks; often used as a hospital; "they put him in the sick bay" | en |
| bay | a small recess opening off a larger room | en |
| bay | a compartment in an aircraft used for some specific purpose; "he opened the bomb bay" | en |
| bay | small Mediterranean evergreen tree with small blackish berries and glossy aromatic leaves used for flavoring in cooking; also used by ancient Greeks to crown victors | en |
| bay | the sound of a hound on the scent | en |
| bay | a horse of a moderate reddish-brown color | en |
| bay | utter in deep prolonged tones | en |
| bay | A recess or inlet in the shore of a sea or lake between two capes or headlands, not as large as a gulf but larger than a cove See also bight, embayment | en |
| bay | (used of animals especially a horse) of a moderate reddish-brown color | en |
| bay | Vertical division of the exterior of a building | en |
| bay | an indentation of a shoreline larger than a cove but smaller than a gulf | en |
| bay | If you keep something or someone at bay, or hold them at bay, you prevent them from reaching, attacking, or affecting you. Eating oranges keeps colds at bay Prisoners armed with baseball bats used the hostages to hold police at bay. In architecture, any division of a building between vertical lines or planes, especially the entire space included between the centerlines of two adjacent vertical supports. The space between two columns or pilasters, or from pier to pier in a church, including that part of the vaulting (see vault) or ceiling between them, is thus called a bay. Any of several small trees with aromatic leaves, especially the sweet bay, or bay laurel (Laurus nobilis), source of the bay leaf used in cooking. The California laurel (Umbellularia californica) is an ornamental tree also called the bay tree. The bay rum tree, or simply bay (Pimenta racemosa), has leaves and twigs that yield, when distilled, oil of bay, which is used in perfumery and in the preparation of bay rum, a fragrant cosmetic and medicinal liquid. Semicircular or nearly circular concavity, similar to a gulf but usually smaller. Bays may range from a few hundred yards to several hundred miles from side to side. They are usually located where easily eroded rocks, such as clays and sandstones, are bounded by harder, more erosion-resistant formations of igneous rocks, such as granite, or hard calcareous rocks, such as massive limestones. Some bays form excellent harbours. Frobisher Bay Dublin Bay prawn Abu Qir Bay Atchafalaya Bay Baffin Bay Barataria Bay Bay of Pigs invasion Bay Laguna de Bengal Bay of Biscayne Bay Botany Bay Buzzards Bay Cádiz Bay of Cam Ranh Bay Campeche Bay of Cardigan Bay Chaleur Bay Chesapeake Bay Conception Bay Coos Bay Marshfield Bay Corpus Christi Bay Delagoa Bay Delaware Bay Faxa Bay Fundy Bay of Georgian Bay Glacier Bay Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve Grand Traverse Bay Green Bay Guantánamo Bay Hervey Bay Hudson Bay Hudson's Bay Co. Islands Bay of Jamaica Bay James Bay Jervis Bay Manila Bay Manila Bay Battle of Massachusetts Bay Colony Milne Bay Mobile Bay Mobile Bay Battle of Montego Bay Moreton Bay Naples Bay of Narragansett Bay Passamaquoddy Bay Peter the Great Bay Prudhoe Bay Quinte Bay of San Francisco Bay Subic Bay Table Bay Tampa Bay Thunder Bay Tokyo Bay Ungava Bay Walvis Bay Whales Bay of Biscay Bay of | en |
| bay | A bay is a part of a coast where the land curves inwards. a short ferry ride across the bay. the Bay of Bengal. the San Francisco Bay area | en |
| bay | bark, howl fiil | en |
| bay | having a dark reddish-brown color (as of a horse) sıfat | en |
| bay | A bay is a partly enclosed area, inside or outside a building, that is used for a particular purpose. The animals are herded into a bay, then butchered The car reversed into the loading bay | en |
| bay | A bay is an area of a room which extends beyond the main walls of a house, especially an area with a large window at the front of a house | en |
| bay | If a dog or wolf bays, it makes loud, long cries. A dog suddenly howled, baying at the moon. see also sick bay | en |
| bay | If a number of people are baying for something, they are demanding something angrily, usually that someone should be punished. The referee ignored voices baying for a penalty. the baying crowd. = clamour | en |
| bay | A bay horse is reddish-brown in colour | en |
| bay | A wide, curving indentation, recess, or arm of a sea or lake into the land or between two capes or headlands, larger than a cove, and usually smaller than, but of the same general character as, a gulf (Bates & Jackson 1987) | en |
| bay | bark with prolonged noises, of dogs | en |
| bay | The distance between the main frames of a building | en |
| bay | A wide area of water extending into land from a sea or lake San Francisco, California, is on the Golden Gate Bay | en |
| bay | An opening in the chassis used for installation of mass storage equipment such as a CD-ROM drive | en |
| bay | A wide area of water extending into land from a sea or lake | en |
| bay | part of the sea or lake extending into land | en |
| bay | Space between two bents | en |
| bay | A regularly repeating division of a facade, marked by fenestration | en |
| bay | A telephone industry term for the space between the vertical panels or mounting strips ("rails") of the rack One rack may contain several bays A bay is another place you put your equipment | en |
| bay | An unfinished area or space between a row of columns and the bearing wall Usually the smallest area into which a building floor can be partitioned | en |
| bay | Sections into which the nave of a church is divided, generally by columns or pillars Can be counted by following the longitudinal axis | en |
| bay | A recess or INLET in the SHORE of a SEA or lake between two capes or HEADLANDS, not as large as a GULF but larger than a COVE See also BIGHT, EMBAYMENT See Figure 5 | en |
| bay | Internal division of building marked by roof principals or vaulting piers; A unit of interior space in a building, marked off by architectural divisions | en |
| bay | A recess in the shore or an inlet of a sea between two capes or headlands, not so large as a gulf but larger than a cove | en |
| bay | place in a computer case to put drives and other devices | en |
| bay | The opening between two columns or walls that forms a space | en |
| bay | A vertical division of a vessel from stem to stern, used as a part of the indication of a stowage place for containers The numbers run from stem to stern; odd numbers indicate a 20 foot position, even numbers indicate a 40 foot position | en |
| bay | A body of water partially enclosed by land, but with a large outlet to the sea or ocean | en |
| bay | a unit of a building marked by vaulting or roof compartments | en |
| bay | A part of a sea or lake that advances inland of the shoreline | en |
| bay | A part of an ocean or lake extending into the land | en |