6-letter words containing a, c, k
- clacka — (Geordie, vulgar, slang) A testicle.
- clacky — Clackety.
- clanks — Plural form of clank.
- clanky — making clanking sounds
- clarke — Sir Arthur C(harles). 1917–2008, British science-fiction writer, who helped to develop the first communications satellites. He scripted the film 2001, A Space Odyssey (1968)
- cloaks — Plural form of cloak.
- comake — to make together
- cracks — to break without complete separation of parts; become fissured: The plate cracked when I dropped it, but it was still usable.
- crackt — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of crack.
- cracky — full of cracks
- craker — (obsolete) One who boasts; a braggart.
- crakow — poulaine.
- cranko — John. 1927–73, British choreographer, born in South Africa: director of the Stuttgart Ballet (1961–73)
- cranks — Plural form of crank.
- cranky — If you describe ideas or ways of behaving as cranky, you disapprove of them because you think they are strange.
- creaks — to make a sharp, harsh, grating, or squeaking sound.
- creaky — A creaky object creaks when it moves.
- croaks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of croak.
- croaky — If someone's voice is croaky, it is low and rough.
- cusack — Cyril (James). 1910–93, Irish actor
- czapka — a leather and felt peaked military helmet of Polish origin
- dacker — to walk slowly; to saunter
- depack — (transitive,computing) To decompress (data).
- eirack — a young hen in its first year
- facked — Simple past tense and past participle of fack.
- flacks — Plural form of flack.
- franck — César (Auguste) [sey-zar oh-gyst] /seɪˈzar oʊˈgüst/ (Show IPA), 1822–90, French composer, born in Belgium.
- h-back — a wingback or slotback
- hacked — to place (something) on a hack, as for drying or feeding.
- hackee — (US, dialect) The chickaree or red squirrel.
- hacker — a person, as an artist or writer, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and mediocre work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts: As a painter, he was little more than a hack.
- hackie — hack2 (def 7b).
- hackle — one of the long, slender feathers on the neck or saddle of certain birds, as the domestic rooster, much used in making artificial flies for anglers.
- hackly — rough or jagged, as if hacked: Some minerals break with a hackly fracture.
- hawick — a town in SE Scotland, in S central Scottish Borders: knitwear industry. Pop: 14 573 (2001)
- hijack — to steal (cargo) from a truck or other vehicle after forcing it to stop: to hijack a load of whiskey.
- jackal — any of several nocturnal wild dogs of the genus Canis, especially C. aureus, of Asia and Africa, that scavenge or hunt in packs.
- jacked — Carpentry. having a height or length less than that of most of the others in a structure; cripple: jack rafter; jack truss.
- jacker — any of various portable devices for raising or lifting heavy objects short heights, using various mechanical, pneumatic, or hydraulic methods.
- jacket — a short coat, in any of various forms, usually opening down the front.
- jackey — gin1 .
- jackie — Bill ("Bojangles") 1878–1949, U.S. tap dancer.
- jacksy — (slang, British) Backside.
- kaccha — (Sikhism) An undergarment worn by baptized Sikhs, one of the five Ks.
- kaonic — of or relating to a kaon
- karmic — Hinduism, Buddhism. action, seen as bringing upon oneself inevitable results, good or bad, either in this life or in a reincarnation: in Hinduism one of the means of reaching Brahman. Compare bhakti (def 1), jnana.
- kechua — Quechua.
- keycap — The part of a key (on a keyboard) that is pressed by the user, as opposed to any electromechanical unit underneath.
- klatch — a casual gathering of people, especially for refreshments and informal conversation: a sewing klatsch.
- knacks — Plural form of knack.