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10-letter words containing c, a, s, k

  • cross talk — interference in one channel from another or others
  • crossjacks — Plural form of crossjack.
  • crosswalks — Plural form of crosswalk.
  • cruikshank — George. 1792–1878, English illustrator and caricaturist
  • cube steak — a thin slice of beef that has been tenderized by being cubed
  • cutty sark — a three-masted merchant clipper built in Dumbarton, Scotland in 1869, now kept as a museum ship at Greenwich, London; badly damaged by a fire in 2007; restored then reopened in 2012
  • dead stock — farm equipment
  • dead-stick — designating a landing made by an aircraft or spacecraft without using power
  • deckchairs — Plural form of deckchair.
  • dick-heads — dick (def 3).
  • dickensian — of Charles Dickens or his works
  • disc brake — a brake system in which a disc attached to a wheel is slowed by the friction of brake pads being pressed against the disc by a caliper.
  • disk crank — a crank having the form of a disk with a crankpin mounted off-center.
  • disk crash — the failure of a disk storage system, usually resulting from the read-write head touching the moving disk surface and causing mechanical damage
  • disk space — a number of bytes on a disk for the storage of data
  • dockmaster — a person who supervises the dry-docking of ships.
  • doodlesack — bagpipe (def 1).
  • dreadlocks — a hair style, especially among Rastafarians, in which the hair is worn in long, ropelike locks.
  • dual-stack — (networking)   A term used to describe a network node running both IPv4 and IPv6 protocol stacks (or possibly others) at the same time. Such a machine can act as a protocol converter between the two networks. A node without dual-stack support can relay traffic in a protocol it does not support natively by use of tunnelling.
  • duck's ass — DA.
  • duckboards — Plural form of duckboard.
  • dustjacket — Alternative form of dust jacket.
  • ekphrastic — Pertaining to ekphrasis; clear, lucid.
  • escape key — a key on a computer keyboard used to leave a computer-program sequence before its end, in order to commence another sequence
  • fantastick — Obsolete form of fantastic.
  • fast track — a racetrack dry and hard enough for optimum speed.
  • fast-track — of or relating to the fast track.
  • flagsticks — Plural form of flagstick.
  • flarebacks — Plural form of flareback.
  • flash back — If your mind flashes back to something in the past, you remember it or think of it briefly or suddenly.
  • flash-lock — stanch1 (def 5).
  • flashbacks — Plural form of flashback.
  • flick-pass — a movement in which the ball is passed quickly to another player by flicking it out of the hand; often performed with only one hand
  • fruitcakes — Plural form of fruitcake.
  • gas cooker — cooking stove that runs on gas
  • goatsucker — nightjar (def 2).
  • gobsmacked — utterly astounded; astonished.
  • gottschalk — Louis Moreau [maw-roh,, moh-] /mɔˈroʊ,, moʊ-/ (Show IPA), 1829–69, U.S. pianist and composer.
  • grass sack — South Midland U.S. a gunnysack.
  • grasswrack — any of several perennial submerged marine plants of the genus Zostera; eelgrass
  • greenbacks — Plural form of greenback.
  • gunnysacks — Plural form of gunnysack.
  • hack house — Falconry. a shed where young hawks are kept and fed while at hack.
  • hackamores — Plural form of hackamore.
  • hackensack — a city in NE New Jersey, near New York City.
  • hackeysack — A non-competition sport in which a small sack, or
  • hackintosh — 1.   (jargon, computer)   An Apple Lisa that has been hacked into emulating a Macintosh (also called a "Mac XL"). 2.   (jargon, computer)   A Macintosh assembled from parts theoretically belonging to different models in the line.
  • hacktivism — the practice of gaining unauthorized access to a computer system and carrying out various disruptive actions as a means of achieving political or social goals: In this form of hacktivism, the hacker tries to alter or deface a government website.
  • hacktivist — the practice of gaining unauthorized access to a computer system and carrying out various disruptive actions as a means of achieving political or social goals: In this form of hacktivism, the hacker tries to alter or deface a government website.
  • hacky sack — (lowercase) a game in which a footbag is juggled with the feet.
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