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10-letter words containing d, r, e, c, k

  • duckshover — one who duckshoves, jumps a queue; cheats
  • feedbacker — One who provides feedback.
  • french kid — kidskin tanned by an alum or vegetable process and finished in a manner originally employed by the French.
  • gridlocked — Simple past tense and past participle of gridlock.
  • hardbacked — (of a book) Having a solid binding; hardback.
  • head clerk — a supervisor; manager
  • huckstered — Simple past tense and past participle of huckster.
  • inner dock — a part of dock or pier which is further inland
  • kerchiefed — Wearing a kerchief.
  • kiddie car — a toy vehicle for a small child, having three wheels and pushed with the feet.
  • kincardine — a former county in E Scotland.
  • knackebrod — flat, thin, brittle unleavened rye bread.
  • kodachrome — (lowercase) a positive color transparency.
  • lardy cake — a rich sweet cake made of bread dough, lard, sugar, and dried fruit
  • lead track — a track connecting a railroad yard or facility with a main line or running track.
  • lower deck — the lowermost deck in a hull having two or three decks.
  • mower deck — cutter deck.
  • muckspread — to muckrake
  • orchidlike — Resembling an orchid or some aspect of one.
  • overcooked — Simple past tense and past participle of overcook.
  • packthread — a strong thread or twine for sewing or tying up packages.
  • peckerwood — Midland and Southern U.S. woodpecker.
  • penderecki — Krzysztof [kshish-tawf] /ˈkʃɪʃ tɔf/ (Show IPA), born 1933, Polish composer.
  • pockmarked — Usually, pockmarks. scars or pits left by a pustule in smallpox or the like.
  • poker dice — (used with a plural verb) dice that, instead of being marked with spots, carry on their faces a picture or symbol representing the six highest playing cards: ace, king, queen, jack, ten, nine.
  • pre-cooked — Pre-cooked food has been prepared and cooked in advance so that it only needs to be heated quickly before you eat it.
  • pre-packed — Pre-packed goods are packed or wrapped before they are sent to the shop where they are sold.
  • racked out — a framework of bars, wires, or pegs on which articles are arranged or deposited: a clothes rack; a luggage rack.
  • red jacket — (Sagoyewatha) c1756–1830, Seneca leader.
  • red packet — a sum of money folded inside red paper and given at the Chinese New Year to unmarried younger relatives
  • red-necked — an uneducated white farm laborer, especially from the South.
  • rock-faced — (of a person) having a stiff, expressionless face.
  • sack dress — a loose, unbelted dress that hangs straight from the shoulder to the hemline.
  • sandsucker — the flatfish Platessa limandoides
  • stockrider — a cowboy.
  • trafficked — the movement of vehicles, ships, persons, etc., in an area, along a street, through an air lane, over a water route, etc.: the heavy traffic on Main Street.
  • understock — to provide an insufficient quantity, as of merchandise, supplies, or livestock.
  • undertrick — a trick that a declarer failed to win in relation to the number of tricks necessary to make the contract.
  • unreckoned — not reckoned, noted, identified, or enumerated
  • untuckered — (of a woman or an item of women's clothing) not having a tucker or lace frill around the neck
  • upper deck — the uppermost continuous deck that is capable of being made watertight; freeboard deck.
  • windsucker — a horse afflicted with cribbing.
  • woodpecker — any of numerous climbing birds of the family Picidae, having a hard, chisellike bill that it hammers repeatedly into wood in search of insects, stiff tail feathers to assist in climbing, and usually more or less boldly patterned plumage.
  • wry-necked — afflicted with wryneck.
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