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7-letter words containing a, k

  • chacked — Simple past tense and past participle of chack.
  • chackle — to chatter; jabber.
  • chakras — Plural form of chakra.
  • chalked — Simple past tense and past participle of chalk.
  • champak — An Asian evergreen tree of the magnolia family, bearing fragrant orange flowers and sacred to Hindus and Buddhists.
  • charked — Simple past tense and past participle of chark.
  • charkha — (in India) a spinning wheel, esp for cotton
  • charpakGeorges [zhawrzh] /ʒɔrʒ/ (Show IPA), 1924–2010, French physicist, born in Poland: Nobel Prize 1992.
  • chikara — the attribute of might or force
  • chilkat — a member of an Indian people of the Pacific coastal area of southeastern Alaska belonging to the Tlingit group of Indians.
  • chkalov — former name of Orenburg.
  • chukars — Plural form of chukar.
  • clacked — to make a quick, sharp sound, or a succession of such sounds, as by striking or cracking: The loom clacked busily under her expert hands.
  • clacker — an object that makes a clacking sound
  • clacket — Make a series of sharp sounds as a result of a hard object striking another.
  • clanked — a sharp, hard, nonresonant sound, like that produced by two pieces of metal striking, one against the other: the clank of chains; the clank of an iron gate slamming shut.
  • clanker — Something that makes a clanking noise.
  • clarkia — any North American onagraceous plant of the genus Clarkia: cultivated for their red, purple, or pink flowers
  • cloaked — Wearing a cloak.
  • cockade — a feather or ribbon worn on military headwear
  • comaker — a person who, in addition to a person who is borrowing money, makes a formal promise that a loan will be repaid or a payment made to a creditor, by signing a promissory note
  • commack — a town on central Long Island, in SE New York.
  • conakry — the capital of Guinea, a port on the island of Tombo. Pop: 1 465 000 (2005 est)
  • corkage — a charge made at a restaurant for serving wine, etc, bought off the premises
  • cormack — Allan (MacLeod)1924-98; U.S. physicist, born in South Africa
  • cossack — (formerly) any of the free warrior-peasants of chiefly East Slavonic descent who lived in communes, esp in Ukraine, and served as cavalry under the tsars
  • cracked — An object that is cracked has lines on its surface because it is damaged.
  • cracker — A cracker is a thin, crisp biscuit which is often eaten with cheese.
  • cracket — a low stool, often one with three legs
  • crackie — a small noisy dog.
  • crackle — If something crackles, it makes a rapid series of short, harsh noises.
  • crackly — Something that is crackly, especially a recording or broadcast, has or makes a lot of short, harsh noises.
  • crackup — a cracking up
  • cranked — Machinery. any of several types of arms or levers for imparting rotary or oscillatory motion to a rotating shaft, one end of the crank being fixed to the shaft and the other end receiving reciprocating motion from a hand, connecting rod, etc.
  • cranker — a crank vessel.
  • crankle — a bend or twist
  • crankly — in a crank manner
  • creaked — Simple past tense and past participle of creak.
  • croaked — Simple past tense and past participle of croak.
  • croaker — an animal, bird, etc, that croaks
  • cupcake — Cupcakes are small iced cakes for one person.
  • cutback — A cutback is a reduction that is made in something.
  • cutbank — the outer, steeper bank of a bend or meander in a river or stream
  • cuttack — a city in NE India, in E Odisha (formerly Orissa) near the mouth of the Mahanadi River: former state capital until 1948. Pop: 535 139 (2001)
  • d quark — the quark having electric charge −1/3 times the elementary charge, with strangeness, charm, and other quark quantum numbers equal to 0.
  • daddock — the rotten carcass of a dead tree
  • daglock — a dung-caked lock of wool around the hindquarters of a sheep
  • daikons — Plural form of daikon.
  • daimoku — (in Nichiren Buddhism) the words nam myoho renge kyo ('devotion to the Lotus Sutra') chanted to the Gohonzon
  • dakoity — dacoity.
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