0%

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.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?