A hat, of various shapes, made from a felted beaver fur (or later of silk), fashionable in Europe between 1550 and 1850.
Beaver cloth, a heavy felted woollen cloth, used chiefly for making overcoats.
A brown colour, like that of a beaver.
The fur of the beaver.
The pubic hair near a vulva or a vulva itself; (attributively) denoting films or literature featuring nude women.
Beaver pelts as an article of exchange or as a standard of value.
A woman, especially one who is sexually attractive.
A game, in which points are scored by spotting beards.
A semiaquatic rodent of the genus Castor, having a wide, flat tail and webbed feet.
A beard or a bearded person.
A move in response to being doubled, in which one immediately doubles the stakes again, keeping the doubling cube on one’s own side of the board.
To cut a continuous ring around a tree that one is felling.
After being doubled, to immediately double the stakes again, a move that keeps the doubling cube on one’s own side of the board.
To form a felt-like texture, similar to the way beaver fur is used for felt-making.
To work hard.
To spot a beard in a game of beaver.
A top hat.
A short outer jacket worn by women or children.
The head or chief of an organization.
One who tops steel ingots.
A person or tool that cuts off the top of something.
A pencil sharpener.
Something that is on top.
A single-handed dinghy, 11 foot (3.6 metres) in length, with only one sail.
A small secondary comic strip seen along with a larger Sunday strip, and usually by the same author.
A three-square float, or file, used by comb-makers.
The student who achieves the highest score in an examination.
Something that exceeds those previous in a series, as a joke or prank.
A soft, relatively thin, piece of padding placed on top of a mattress, or forming the upper layer of a mattress.