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9-letter words containing d, r, i, n, k, a

  • bank raid — an attack on a bank, often involving firearms and violence, with the aim of stealing money or other valuables
  • darkening — Present participle of darken.
  • darklings — in darkness
  • debarking — Present participle of debark.
  • demarking — demarcate.
  • drag king — a female who dresses as a man and impersonates male characteristics for public entertainment
  • drag link — a link connecting cranks on parallel shafts.
  • drawknife — a knife with a handle at each end at right angles to the blade, used by drawing over a surface.
  • drinkable — suitable for drinking.
  • drinkably — from the point of view of how drinkable something is
  • drinkware — Vessels from which people drink.
  • grandkids — grandchild.
  • handiwork — work done by hand.
  • hard link — (file system)   One of several directory entries which refer to the same Unix file. A hard link is created with the "ln" (link) command: ln where and are pathnames within the same file system. Hard links to the same file are indistinguishable from each other except that they have different pathnames. They all refer to the same inode and the inode contains all the information about a file. The standard ln command does not usually allow you to create a hard link to a directory, chiefly because the standard rm and rmdir commands do not allow you to delete such a link. Some systems provide link and unlink commands which give direct access to the system calls of the same name, for which no such restrictions apply. Normally all hard links to a file must be in the same file system because a directory entry just relates a pathname to an inode within the same file system. The only exception is a mount point. The restrictions on hard links to directories and between file systems are very common but are not mandated by POSIX. Symbolic links are often used instead of hard links because they do not suffer from these restrictions. The space associated with a file is not freed until all the hard links to the file are deleted. This explains why the system call to delete a file is called "unlink".
  • irukandji — a tiny but highly venomous Australian jellyfish
  • kabardian — a Circassian language of the Kabardino-Balkar Autonomous Republic.
  • kidnapers — Plural form of kidnaper.
  • kidnapper — to steal, carry off, or abduct by force or fraud, especially for use as a hostage or to extract ransom.
  • kinkaider — a person who received free land under the provisions of the Kinkaid Act.
  • kurdistan — a mountain and plateau region in SE Turkey, NW Iran, and N Iraq: inhabited largely by Kurds. 74,000 sq. mi. (191,660 sq. km).
  • link road — a road used to link two cities or two more major hubs of road transport
  • mackinder — Sir Halford John. 1861–1947, British geographer noted esp for his work in political geography. His writings include Democratic Ideas and Reality (1919)
  • predikant — a minister in the Dutch Reformed Church, esp in South Africa
  • rickstand — a platform on which to put or make a rick or haystack
  • snakebird — anhinga.
  • spikenard — an aromatic, Indian plant, Nardostachys jatamansi, of the valerian family, believed to be the nard of the ancients.
  • windbreak — a growth of trees, a structure of boards, or the like, serving as a shelter from the wind.

On this page, we collect all 9-letter words with D-R-I-N-K-A. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 9-letter word that contains in D-R-I-N-K-A to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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