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10-letter words containing c, o, k

  • acknowledg — Obsolete form of acknowledge.
  • acousticks — Obsolete form of acoustics.
  • ad-hockery — reliance on temporary solutions rather than on consistent, long-term plans.
  • adirondack — a member of an Algonquian people living mainly north of the St. Lawrence River.
  • aftershock — Aftershocks are smaller earthquakes which occur after a large earthquake.
  • ahorseback — on horseback
  • aiken code — (data)   An alternative form of the Binary Coded Decimal (BCD) system for encoding numbers. Where BCD encodes each decimal digit in normal binary, Aiken code uses the encoding shown below. This is supposed to be less prone to corruption. The following table shows the encoding of each decimal digit, D, in BCD and Aiken code: D BCD Aiken 0 0000 0000 1 0001 0001 2 0010 0010 3 0011 0011 4 0100 0100 5 0101 1011 (inverted 4) 6 0110 1100 (inverted 3) 7 0111 1101 (inverted 2) 8 1000 1110 (inverted 1) 9 1001 1111 (inverted 0) The Aiken code was probably designed by Howard Aiken in the 1940s or 1950s for use in data transmission. Compare: Gray code.
  • 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.
  • alarmclock — Misspelling of alarm clock.
  • alaska cod — a cod, Gadus macrocephalus.
  • 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
  • ankle sock — a short sock coming up to the ankle
  • anti-knock — An anti-knock agent helps to stop an engine from knocking, making it function more smoothly.
  • antishocks — antishock
  • archipenko — Aleksandr Porfiryevich (alɪkˈsandr parˈfirjɪvitʃ). 1887– 1964, Russian sculptor and painter, in the US after 1923, whose work is characterized by economy of form
  • artichokes — Plural form of artichoke.
  • attack dog — a dog trained to attack on command
  • ayers rock — a conspicuous red monadnock in central Australia, in the SW Northern Territory: tourist attraction. 1143 feet (348 meters) high.
  • back bacon — lean bacon from the back of a pig's loin
  • back cover — the back part of the cover of a book or magazine
  • back float — a floating position on one's back with arms extended out to the sides and face upward.
  • back focus — the distance between the back surface of a lens and the focal plane when the lens is focused at infinity.
  • back forty — remote, usually uncultivated acreage on a large piece of land, as on a farm or ranch.
  • back order — an order to be filled when stock is renewed
  • 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 score — a line at each end of the rink parallel to and equidistant from the foot score and the sweeping score.
  • 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 vowel — a vowel whose sound is produced in the back of the mouth or the throat
  • back-cloth — backdrop (def 1).
  • back-order — to treat as a back order: We have to back-order your sofa until the new fabric arrives.
  • backblocks — bush or remote farming area far distant from city amenities
  • backboards — Plural form of backboard.
  • backcloths — Plural form of backcloth.
  • backcombed — Simple past tense and past participle of backcomb.
  • backcourts — Plural form of backcourt.
  • backend-to — in a reversed position; backward.
  • backgammon — Backgammon is a game for two people, played on a board marked with long triangles. Each player has 15 wooden or plastic discs. The players throw dice and move the discs around the board.
  • background — Your background is the kind of family you come from and the kind of education you have had. It can also refer to such things as your social and racial origins, your financial status, or the type of work experience that you have.
  • backlogged — a reserve or accumulation, as of stock, work, or business: a backlog of business orders.
  • backoffice — (software)   A suite of network server software from Microsoft that includes Windows NT Server, BackOffice Server (for the integrated development, deployment, and management of BackOffice applications in departments, branch offices, and medium sized businesses); Exchange Server; Proxy Server; Site Server for intranet publishing, management, and search; Site Server Commerce Edition For comprehensive Internet commerce transactions; Small Business Server for business operations, resource management, and customer relations; SNA Server for the integration of existing and new systems and data; SQL Server for scalable, reliable database and data-warehousing; Systems Management Server (SMS) for centralised change- and configuration-management.
  • backronyms — Plural form of backronym.
  • backstroke — Backstroke is a swimming stroke that you do lying on your back.
  • backswords — Plural form of backsword.
  • backwoodsy — like or of the nature of backwoods
  • bar kochba — Simeon. died 135 ad, Jewish leader who led an unsuccessful revolt against the Romans in Palestine
  • 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
  • belowdecks — below a ship's deck
  • bench hook — a device with a hooklike part fitting over the front edge of a workbench as a means of preventing an object from slipping toward the rear of the bench.

On this page, we collect all 10-letter words with C-O-K. 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 to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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