7-letter words containing c, a, s, k
- 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.
- ransack — to search thoroughly or vigorously through (a house, receptacle, etc.): They ransacked the house for the missing letter.
- restack — a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers.
- sack in — hit the sack
- sackage — the act of sacking a place
- sackbut — a medieval form of the trombone.
- sackful — the amount a sack will hold.
- sacking — the plundering of a captured place; pillage: the sack of Troy.
- saclike — a baglike structure in an animal, plant, or fungus, as one containing fluid.
- sawbuck — a ten-dollar bill.
- schrank — (in Pennsylvania Dutch furniture) a two-door clothes cabinet one side of which has drawers and shelves and the other side an open space for hanging clothes.
- seacock — a valve in the hull of a vessel for admitting outside water into some part of the hull, as a ballast tank.
- seajack — the hijacking of a ship, especially one that occurs while the vessel is under way.
- seasick — afflicted with seasickness.
- setback — Surveying. the interval by which a chain or tape exceeds the length being measured.
- shacked — to chase and throw back; to retrieve: to shack a ground ball.
- shacket — a yellowjacket or hornet.
- shackle — a ring or other fastening, as of iron, for securing the wrist, ankle, etc.; fetter.
- shackup — an instance of shacking up: The census people counted both marriages and shackups.
- sickbay — a hospital or dispensary, especially aboard ship.
- skyclad — naked
- skyjack — to hijack (an airliner), especially in order to hold the passengers and plane for ransom or for political reasons.
- slacken — If something slackens or if you slacken it, it becomes slower, less active, or less intense.
- slacker — a slack condition or part.
- slackly — not tight, taut, firm, or tense; loose: a slack rope.
- smacker — a dollar.
- snacker — a person who snacks or eats between main meals
- spackle — a hole-filling compound
- stacked — (of a woman) having a voluptuous figure.
- stacker — a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers.
- stacket — a palisade, a strong defensive fence of wooden posts
- stackup — stack (def 13).
- sunback — (of a garment) cut low to expose the back for sunbathing or coolness.
- swacked — in a state of intoxication, stupor, or euphoria induced by drugs or alcohol
- tackies — a sneaker.
- towsack — South Midland and Southern U.S. gunnysack.
- tuckals — An old statistical package still in use on some VM computers.
- unstack — a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers.
- wackest — wacko.
- waesuck — alas