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11-letter words containing c, l, i, k, t

  • leschetizky — Theodor [tey-uh-dawr,, -dohr,, thee-] /ˈteɪ əˌdɔr,, -ˌdoʊr,, ˈθi-/ (Show IPA), 1830–1915, Polish pianist and composer.
  • lickspittle — a contemptible, fawning person; a servile flatterer or toady.
  • life jacket — a sleeveless jacket of buoyant or inflatable construction, for supporting the wearer in deep water and preventing drowning.
  • lightsticks — Plural form of lightstick.
  • lightstruck — (of beer) Spoiled by exposure to light, which causes riboflavin to react with and break down the isohumulones.
  • little rock — state in S central United States. 53,103 sq. mi. (137,537 sq. km). Capital: Little Rock. Abbreviation: AR (for use with zip code), Ark.
  • littlenecks — Plural form of littleneck.
  • lock stitch — a sewing-machine stitch in which two threads are locked together at small intervals.
  • maeterlinck — Comte Maurice [French moh-rees] /French moʊˈris/ (Show IPA), 1862–1947, Belgian poet, dramatist, and essayist: Nobel prize 1911.
  • meal ticketCarl Owen ("King Carl"; "The Meal Ticket") 1903–88, U.S. baseball pitcher.
  • mitre block — a block of wood with slots for cutting mitre joints with a saw
  • multi-track — a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
  • needlestick — Puncture of the skin by a hypodermic needle or other sharp object.
  • nickel belt — the area around Sudbury in Northern Ontario, rich in nickel ore
  • nitro-chalk — a chemical fertilizer containing calcium carbonate and ammonium nitrate
  • ostrichlike — a large, two-toed, swift-footed flightless bird, Struthio camelus, indigenous to Africa and Arabia, domesticated for its plumage: the largest of living birds.
  • outpolitick — to surpass in politicking
  • packability — The quality or state of being packable.
  • pc-talk iii — (communications, tool)   An MS-DOS communications program by Andrew Fluegelman.
  • picket line — a line of strikers or other demonstrators serving as pickets.
  • pitch-black — extremely black or dark as pitch: a pitch-black night.
  • platykurtic — (of a frequency distribution) less concentrated about the mean than the corresponding normal distribution.
  • poikilocyte — an abnormally shaped red blood cell
  • politicking — activity undertaken for political reasons or ends, as campaigning for votes before an election, making speeches, etc., or otherwise promoting oneself or one's policies.
  • pugil stick — a long pole or stick with padded ends used to carry out mock combat.
  • racket-tail — any of several birds with a racket-shaped tail, such as certain hummingbirds and kingfishers
  • rib-tickler — very amusing; funny or hilarious: a book of rib-tickling stories.
  • rickettsial — any member of the genus Rickettsia, comprising rod-shaped to coccoid microorganisms that resemble bacteria but can be as small as a large virus and reproduce only inside a living cell, parasitic in fleas, ticks, lice, and mites and transmitted by bite to vertebrate hosts, including humans, causing such severe diseases as typhus and Rocky Mountain spotted fever.
  • right-click — to depress the right-hand mouse button, as to display a menu.
  • silk cotton — the silky covering of the seeds of certain tropical trees of the bombax family, used for stuffing cushions, pillows, etc.
  • singlestick — a short, heavy stick.
  • singletrack — (of a railroad or section of a railroad's route) having but one set of tracks, so that trains going in opposite directions must be scheduled to meet only at points where there are sidings.
  • skeptically — inclined to skepticism; having an attitude of doubt: a skeptical young woman who will question whatever you say.
  • skillcentre — an institution providing vocational training or retraining for employed or unemployed people
  • slacktivism — actions taken to bring about political or social change but requiring only minimal commitment, effort, or risk: students engaging in slacktivism by signing an online petition.
  • slit pocket — a pocket on the underside of a garment, reached through a vertical opening
  • stick float — a float attached at the top and bottom to the line
  • stick style — a style in mid-Victorian American wooden architecture characterized by the use of vertical board siding with battens or grids of boards over horizontal siding to express the framing beneath.
  • stick-built — built piece-by-piece at the construction site, as opposed to factory-built.
  • stickhandle — (in hockey and lacrosse) to control and skillfully maneuver the ball or puck with the stick.
  • stickleader — a person assigned to check the appearance or condition of each person in a stick
  • stickleback — any of the small, pugnacious, spiny-backed fishes of the family Gasterosteidae, inhabiting northern fresh waters and sea inlets, the male of which builds and guards the nest.
  • stock split — the act or result of splitting stock
  • stock-still — completely still; motionless.
  • stockpiling — the activity of acquiring and storing a large quantity of something
  • sucker list — a list of names and addresses of persons considered by a business, charity organization, etc., to be likely purchasers or donors.
  • telekinetic — psychokinesis.
  • tickle pink — to please greatly
  • title track — The title track on a CD, record, or tape is a song or piece of music that has the same title as the CD, record, or tape.
  • tracklaying — (of a vehicle) having an endless jointed metal band around the wheels
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