9-letter words containing c, o, k
- cocktails — Plural form of cocktail.
- code book — a book containing a list of code signals with their meanings, usually arranged alphabetically.
- code walk — (programming) Stepping through source code as part of a code review. Where a code walk probably only follows the potential control flow of a program, a dry run is a more detailed manual execution of a program that also keeps track of the value of every variable involved.
- coin lock — a lock that is opened by the insertion of a coin.
- coke oven — an oven in which coal is converted into coke
- cokeheads — Plural form of cokehead.
- cokuloris — a palette with irregular holes, placed between lighting and camera to prevent glare
- cold deck — a pack with the cards in prearranged order, secretly exchanged for the one in use; stacked deck.
- cold duck — an alcoholic beverage made from equal parts of burgundy and champagne
- cold pack — a method of lowering the body temperature by wrapping a person in a sheet soaked in cold water
- cold work — the craft of shaping metal without heat
- cold-cock — to strike so as to make unconscious
- cold-pack — to place a cold pack on: to cold-pack a feverish patient.
- cold-work — to work (metal) at a temperature below that at which recrystallization occurs.
- color-key — color-code.
- comb back — a Windsor chair back in which the vertical spindles are surmounted by a broad, carved crest rail resembling a comb.
- come back — If something that you had forgotten comes back to you, you remember it.
- comebacks — Plural form of comeback.
- con trick — swindle
- contakion — kontakion.
- cook shop — a shop that sells cookery equipment
- cookbooks — Plural form of cookbook.
- cooked up — to prepare (food) by the use of heat, as by boiling, baking, or roasting.
- cooked-up — to prepare (food) by the use of heat, as by boiling, baking, or roasting.
- cookeries — Plural form of cookery.
- cookhouse — a place for cooking, esp a camp kitchen
- cookshack — a makeshift building in which food is cooked
- cookstove — a stove for cooking
- cookstown — a district of central Northern Ireland, in Co Tyrone. Pop: 33 387 (2003 est). Area: 622 sq km (240 sq miles)
- cooldrink — (South Africa) soft drink.
- coonskins — Plural form of coonskin.
- copacking — The manufacture and packaging of a product under contract to a client (and having the client's name/brand on the packaging).
- copy desk — a desk where copy is edited
- copybooks — Plural form of copybook.
- copybroke — (security) /kop'ee-brohk/ (Or "copywronged" - a play on "copyright") 1. Used to describe an instance of a copy-protected program that has been "broken"; that is, a copy with the copy-protection scheme disabled or removed. 2. Copy-protected software which is unusable because of some bit-rot or bug that has confused the copy protection. 3. Used to describe data damaged because of a side effect of a copy protection system.
- copytaker — (esp in a newspaper office) a person employed to type reports as journalists dictate them over the telephone
- core leak — memory leak
- coremaker — a person who makes cores for foundry molds.
- cork tree — the cork oak, Quercus suber, of the beech family.
- corkboard — a thin slab made of granules of cork, used as a floor or wall finish and as an insulator
- corkborer — a tool that cuts a hole in a stopper, allowing a glass tube to be inserted
- corkiness — the state of being corky
- corkingly — (informal) In a corking manner; splendidly.
- corkonian — a native or inhabitant of the city of Cork
- corkscrew — A corkscrew is a device for pulling corks out of bottles.
- corkwoods — Plural form of corkwood.
- corn cake — Midland and Southern U.S. a flat corn bread baked on a griddle.
- corn silk — the silky tuft of styles and stigmas at the tip of an ear of maize, formerly used as a diuretic
- corncrake — a common Eurasian rail, Crex crex, of fields and meadows, with a buff speckled plumage and reddish wings
- cornflake — Cornflakes are small flat pieces of maize that are eaten with milk as a breakfast cereal. They are popular in Britain and the United States.