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7-letter words containing a, s, k, e

  • hankies — Plural form of hanky.
  • harkens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of harken.
  • haskell — (language)   (Named after the logician Haskell Curry) A lazy purely functional language largely derived from Miranda but with several extensions. Haskell was designed by a committee from the functional programming community in April 1990. It features static polymorphic typing, higher-order functions, user-defined algebraic data types, and pattern-matching list comprehensions. Innovations include a class system, systematic operator overloading, a functional I/O system, functional arrays, and separate compilation. Haskell 1.3 added many new features, including monadic I/O, standard libraries, constructor classes, labeled fields in datatypes, strictness annotations, an improved module system, and many changes to the Prelude. Mailing list: <[email protected]>. Yale Haskell - Version 2.0.6, Haskell 1.2 built on Common Lisp. Glasgow Haskell (GHC) - Version 2.04 for DEC Alpha/OSF2; HPPA1.1/HPUX9,10; SPARC/SunOs 4, Solaris 2; MIPS/Irix 5,6; Intel 80386/Linux,Solaris 2,FreeBSD,CygWin 32; PowerPC/AIX. GHC generates C or native code. E-mail: <[email protected]>. Haskell-B - Haskell 1.2 implemented in LML, generates native code. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • hawkers — Plural form of hawker.
  • intakes — Plural form of intake.
  • jackers — Plural form of jacker.
  • jackets — Plural form of jacket.
  • jacksie — (slang, UK) alternative spelling of jacksy.
  • kaesong — a city in S North Korea.
  • kaisers — Plural form of kaiser.
  • kalends — the first day of the month in the ancient Roman calendar, from which the days of the preceding month were counted backward to the ides.
  • kamseen — khamsin
  • kassite — a member of an ancient people related to the Elamites, who ruled Babylonia from c1650 to c1100 b.c.
  • kastler — Alfred [al-fred] /alˈfrɛd/ (Show IPA), 1902–84, French physicist, born in Germany: Nobel Prize 1966.
  • kastner — Erich [ey-rikh] /ˈeɪ rɪx/ (Show IPA), 1899–1974, German writer.
  • kauries — kauri.
  • kayseri — a city in central Turkey.
  • kebayas — Plural form of kebaya.
  • kenosha — a port in SE Wisconsin, on Lake Michigan.
  • keresan — a family of languages spoken by Pueblo tribes of the Rio Grande valley and neighboring areas.
  • kestral — Misspelling of kestrel.
  • keypads — Plural form of keypad.
  • keypals — Plural form of keypal.
  • keyways — Plural form of keyway.
  • kisetla — a pidgin language based on Swahili, formerly used for communication between Europeans and Africans.
  • knawels — Plural form of knawel.
  • krasnerLee, 1908–84, U.S. abstract expressionist painter (wife of Jackson Pollock).
  • kraters — Plural form of krater.
  • lackers — Plural form of lacker.
  • lackeys — Plural form of lackey.
  • laskets — Plural form of lasket.
  • leakers — Plural form of leaker.
  • mackles — Plural form of mackle.
  • makeups — Plural form of makeup.
  • markers — Plural form of marker.
  • markets — Plural form of market.
  • maskers — Plural form of masker.
  • medakas — Plural form of medaka.
  • mismake — to make badly
  • mistake — an error in action, calculation, opinion, or judgment caused by poor reasoning, carelessness, insufficient knowledge, etc.
  • netmask — (networking)   A 32-bit bit mask which shows how an Internet address is to be divided into network, subnet and host parts. The netmask has ones in the bit positions in the 32-bit address which are to be used for the network and subnet parts, and zeros for the host part. The mask should contain at least the standard network portion (as determined by the address's class), and the subnet field should be contiguous with the network portion. If a `+' (plus sign) is given for the netmask value, then the network number is looked up in the NIS netmasks.byaddr map (or in the /etc/netmasks) file if not running the NIS service.
  • omakase — (Japanese cuisine) Chef's choice.
  • passkey — master key.
  • peakish — to become weak, thin, and sickly.
  • presoak — to soak (laundry) in a liquid containing agents that loosen dirt, remove stains, etc., before washing.
  • rackers — Plural form of racker.
  • rackets — a light bat having a netting of catgut or nylon stretched in a more or less oval frame and used for striking the ball in tennis, the shuttlecock in badminton, etc.
  • rankest — growing with excessive luxuriance; vigorous and tall of growth: tall rank weeds.
  • rankles — (of unpleasant feelings, experiences, etc.) to continue to cause keen irritation or bitter resentment within the mind; fester; be painful.
  • respeak — to speak or say (something) again
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