0%

9-letter words containing a, b, k, n

  • debarking — Present participle of debark.
  • debeaking — Present participle of debeak.
  • do a bunk — run away
  • drinkable — suitable for drinking.
  • drinkably — from the point of view of how drinkable something is
  • e-banking — E-banking is the use of the Internet to operate your bank account.
  • embarking — Present participle of embark.
  • fairbanksCharles Warren, 1852–1918, political leader: vice president of the U.S. 1905–09.
  • fernbrake — a thicket or dense growth of ferns.
  • food bank — an agency, group, or center that collects food and distributes it to the needy.
  • frankable — (AU,finance) Eligible for franking, a system of tax credit.
  • gear knob — a gear lever
  • gene bank — a collection of seeds, plants, tissue cultures, etc, of potentially useful species, esp species containing genes of significance to the breeding of crops
  • gernsbackHugo, 1884–1967, U.S. publisher and inventor, born in Belgium: a pioneer in science-fiction publishing.
  • go back n — (networking)   A data link layer protocol.
  • greenback — a U.S. legal-tender note, printed in green on the back since the Civil War, originally issued against the credit of the country and not against gold or silver on deposit.
  • hand back — return, give back
  • handbooks — Plural form of handbook.
  • handbrake — a brake operated by a hand lever. Compare caliper (def 6).
  • hang back — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • hunchback — a person whose back is humped in a convex position because of abnormal spinal curvature. Compare kyphosis, kyphoscoliosis.
  • in-basket — in-box.
  • interbank — Agreed, arranged, or operating between banks.
  • intrabank — Within a single bank (financial institution).
  • invokable — (computing) That can be invoked; callable.
  • jack bean — a bushy tropical plant, Canavalia ensiformis, of the legume family, grown especially for forage.
  • kabardian — a Circassian language of the Kabardino-Balkar Autonomous Republic.
  • kabillion — (slang, hyperbole) An unspecified large number (of).
  • kabloonas — Plural form of kabloona.
  • kakebuton — a thin quilt or coverlet traditionally used when sleeping on a futon.
  • karabiner — a D -shaped ring with a spring catch on one side, used for fastening ropes in mountaineering.
  • kashubian — a West Slavic language closely related to Polish and spoken in northern Poland near the mouth of the Vistula.
  • kayibanda — Grégoire [grey-gwahr;; French grey-gwar] /greɪˈgwɑr;; French greɪˈgwar/ (Show IPA), 1924–76, president of the Republic of Rwanda 1962–73.
  • keansburg — a town in E New Jersey.
  • khanbalik — an ancient city in Mongol China, the capital of Kublai Khan: present-day site of Beijing.
  • king crab — horseshoe crab.
  • kneadable — Capable of being kneaded, or worked into a mass.
  • kneeboard — a short board for surfing or water-skiing in a kneeling position.
  • knockback — A blow that causes the recipient to fall or move backwards, a knock back; a recoil.
  • kobenhavn — Danish name of Copenhagen.
  • kowabunga — Alternative form of cowabunga.
  • københavn — a seaport in and the capital of Denmark, on the E coast of Zealand.
  • lambskins — Plural form of lambskin.
  • land bank — a banking association that engages in the financing of transactions in real property, especially in agricultural land.
  • left bank — a part of Paris, France, on the S bank of the Seine: frequented by artists, writers, and students.
  • m-banking — the practice of making financial transactions or managing bank accounts using mobile phone technology
  • milk bank — a place for collection and storage of human milk for dispensing to those who require it, as for infants who are allergic to cows' milk and whose mothers' milk is unavailable.
  • minibreak — A brief pause for relaxation.
  • multibank — of or involving more than one bank
  • nebraskan — of or relating to Nebraska.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?