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10-letter words containing c, o, k, t

  • acousticks — Obsolete form of acoustics.
  • aftershock — Aftershocks are smaller earthquakes which occur after a large earthquake.
  • air pocket — a localized region of low air density or a descending air current, causing an aircraft to suffer an abrupt decrease in height
  • akaryocyte — A cell that has no nucleus.
  • alpenstock — an early form of ice axe, consisting of a stout stick with an iron tip and sometimes having a pick and adze at the head, formerly used by mountain climbers
  • anti-knock — An anti-knock agent helps to stop an engine from knocking, making it function more smoothly.
  • antishocks — antishock
  • artichokes — Plural form of artichoke.
  • attack dog — a dog trained to attack on command
  • back float — a floating position on one's back with arms extended out to the sides and face upward.
  • back forty — remote, usually uncultivated acreage on a large piece of land, as on a farm or ranch.
  • back quote — (character)   "`" ASCII code 96. Common names: left quote; left single quote; open quote; ITU-T: grave accent; grave. Rare: backprime; INTERCAL: backspark; unapostrophe; birk; blugle; back tick; back glitch; push; ITU-T: opening single quotation mark; quasiquote. Back quote is used in Unix shells to invoke command substitution.
  • back story — background information provided, often in narrative form, to give help in understanding something, as the behavior of a character in a film
  • back tooth — a tooth in the back of your jaw
  • back-cloth — backdrop (def 1).
  • backcloths — Plural form of backcloth.
  • backcourts — Plural form of backcourt.
  • backend-to — in a reversed position; backward.
  • backstroke — Backstroke is a swimming stroke that you do lying on your back.
  • bark cloth — a papery fabric made from the fibrous inner bark of various trees, esp of the moraceous genus Ficus and the leguminous genus Brachystegia
  • beta stock — any of the second rank of active securities on the Stock Exchange, of which there are about 500. Continuous display of prices by market makers is required but not immediate publication of transactions
  • black knot — a fungal disease of plums and cherries caused by Dibotryon morbosum, characterized by rough black knotlike swellings on the twigs and branches
  • black spot — If you describe a place, time, or part of a situation as a black spot, you mean that it is particularly bad or likely to cause problems.
  • blackstone — Sir William. 1723–80, English jurist noted particularly for his Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765–69), which had a profound influence on jurisprudence in the US
  • blackthorn — a thorny Eurasian rosaceous shrub, Prunus spinosa, with black twigs, white flowers, and small sour plumlike fruits
  • block mast — a short mast from the head of which a lateen yard is suspended.
  • block vote — A block vote is a large number of votes that are all cast in the same way by one person on behalf of a group of people.
  • blockflote — a recorder.
  • bloodstock — Horses that are bred for racing are referred to as bloodstock.
  • body track — the tracks of a railroad yard used for switching or sorting cars.
  • bomb ketch — Nautical. a ketch-rigged vessel of the 17th and 18th centuries, carrying heavy mortars for firing bombs.
  • book match — a match in or from a matchbook.
  • boot block — (operating system)   A program on a hard disk, floppy disk or other media, which is loaded when the computer is turned on or rebooted and which controls the next phase of loading the actual operating system. The loading and execution of the boot block is usually controlled by firmware in ROM or PROM. It may be at some fixed location possibly or may be pointed to by the master boot record.
  • bootlicker — to seek the favor or goodwill of in a servile, degraded way; toady to.
  • bottleneck — A bottleneck is a place where a road becomes narrow or where it meets another road so that the traffic slows down or stops, often causing traffic jams.
  • broomstick — A broomstick is an old-fashioned broom which has a bunch of small sticks at the end.
  • bucket out — to empty out with or as if with a bucket
  • cankerroot — goldthread.
  • centistoke — one hundredth of a stoke
  • chalkstone — tophus
  • check into — to stop or arrest the motion of suddenly or forcibly: He checked the horse at the edge of the cliff.
  • checkpoint — A checkpoint is a place where traffic is stopped so that it can be checked.
  • cheektooth — any molar or premolar tooth
  • chockstone — a stone securely jammed in a crack. It may vary in size from a pebble to a large boulder
  • chokepoint — a place of greatest congestion and often hazard; bottleneck.
  • chopsticks — a pair of small sticks of wood or ivory, held together in one hand and used in some Asian countries as utensils, as to lift food to the mouth
  • click stop — a control device, as in a camera, that can be turned or rotated so that when it reaches a specific setting it engages with an audible click.
  • clinkstone — a variety of phonolite that makes a metallic sound when struck
  • clock rate — (processor, benchmark)   The fundamental rate in cycles per second at which a computer performs its most basic operations such as adding two numbers or transfering a value from one register to another. The clock rate of a computer is normally determined by the frequency of a crystal. The original IBM PC, circa 1981, had a clock rate of 4.77 MHz (almost five million cycles/second). As of 1995, Intel's Pentium chip runs at 100 MHz (100 million cycles/second). The clock rate of a computer is only useful for providing comparisons between computer chips in the same processor family. An IBM PC with an Intel 486 CPU running at 50 MHz will be about twice as fast as one with the same CPU, memory and display running at 25 MHz. However, there are many other factors to consider when comparing different computers. Clock rate should not be used when comparing different computers or different processor families. Rather, some benchmark should be used. Clock rate can be very misleading, since the amount of work different computer chips can do in one cycle varies. For example, RISC CPUs tend to have simpler instructions than CISC CPUs (but higher clock rates) and pipelined processors execute more than one instruction per cycle.
  • close-knit — A close-knit group of people are closely linked, do things together, and take an interest in each other.

On this page, we collect all 10-letter words with C-O-K-T. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 10-letter word that contains in C-O-K-T to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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