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7-letter words containing e, n, k

  • cankles — Plural form of cankle.
  • chetnik — a Serbian nationalist belonging to a group that fought against the Turks before World War I and engaged in guerrilla warfare during both World Wars
  • chewink — a North American bird, Pipilo erythrophthalmus
  • chicken — Chickens are birds which are kept on a farm for their eggs and for their meat.
  • chinked — a chinking sound: the chink of ice in a glass.
  • chinkie — a Chinese restaurant
  • chinkle — (nautical) A turn or kink in a rope.
  • chungke — Alternative form of chunkey.
  • chunked — a thick mass or lump of anything: a chunk of bread; a chunk of firewood.
  • chunker — (programming)   A program like Unix's "split" which breaks an input file into parts, usually of a pre-set size, e.g. the maximum size that can fit on a floppy. The parts can then be assembled with a dechunker, which is usually just the chunker in a different mode.
  • chunkey — A sport or game played by the Cherokee and other Native Americans in the Carolinas, which involved rolling stone disks across the ground and throwing spears at them in an attempt to place the spear as close to the stopped stone as possible.
  • clanked — a sharp, hard, nonresonant sound, like that produced by two pieces of metal striking, one against the other: the clank of chains; the clank of an iron gate slamming shut.
  • clanker — Something that makes a clanking noise.
  • clinked — Simple past tense and past participle of clink.
  • clinker — the ash and partially fused residues from a coal-fired furnace or fire
  • clonked — Simple past tense and past participle of clonk.
  • clunked — Simple past tense and past participle of clunk.
  • clunker — If you describe a machine, especially a car, as a clunker, you mean that it is very old and almost falling apart.
  • cockney — A cockney is a person who was born in the East End of London.
  • conkers — a game in which a player swings a horse chestnut (conker), threaded onto a string, against that of another player to try to break it
  • conteck — contention or strife
  • convoke — to call (a meeting, assembly, etc) together; summon
  • cranked — Machinery. any of several types of arms or levers for imparting rotary or oscillatory motion to a rotating shaft, one end of the crank being fixed to the shaft and the other end receiving reciprocating motion from a hand, connecting rod, etc.
  • cranker — a crank vessel.
  • crankle — a bend or twist
  • crinkle — If something crinkles or if you crinkle it, it becomes slightly creased or folded.
  • crunked — excited or intoxicated
  • crunkle — (UK, obsolete, dialectal) To crumple.
  • dankest — Superlative form of dank.
  • darkens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of darken.
  • darknet — a covert communication network on the internet
  • de-link — to make independent; dissociate; separate: The administration has delinked human rights from economic aid to underdeveloped nations.
  • debunks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of debunk.
  • decking — Decking is wooden boards that are fixed to the ground in a garden or other outdoor area for people to walk on.
  • deckman — A man who works on the deck of a ship.
  • deniker — Joseph [zhaw-zef] /ʒɔˈzɛf/ (Show IPA), 1852–1918, French anthropologist and naturalist.
  • denmark — a kingdom in N Europe, between the Baltic and the North Sea: consists of the mainland of Jutland and about 100 inhabited islands (chiefly Zealand, Lolland, Funen, Falster, Langeland, and Bornholm); extended its territory throughout the Middle Ages, ruling Sweden until 1523 and Norway until 1814, and incorporating Greenland as a province from 1953 to 1979; joined the Common Market (now the EU) in 1973; an important exporter of dairy produce. Language: Danish. Religion: Christian, Lutheran majority. Currency: krone. Capital: Copenhagen. Pop: 5 556 452 (2013 est). Area: 43 031 sq km (16 614 sq miles)
  • desking — the desks and related furnishings in a given space, such as an office
  • deskman — a person who works at a desk in a workplace, esp the police sergeant in charge in a police station or a copy editor in a news office
  • deskmen — Plural form of deskman.
  • dickens — Charles (John Huffam), pen name Boz. 1812–70, English novelist, famous for the humour and sympathy of his characterization and his criticism of social injustice. His major works include The Pickwick Papers (1837), Oliver Twist (1839), Nicholas Nickleby (1839), Old Curiosity Shop (1840–41), Martin Chuzzlewit (1844), David Copperfield (1850), Bleak House (1853), Little Dorrit (1857), and Great Expectations (1861)
  • dirksenEverett McKinley, 1896–1969, U.S. politician.
  • doeskin — the skin of a doe.
  • donetsk — a city in E Ukraine, in the Donets Basin.
  • donkeys — Plural form of donkey.
  • drinked — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of drink.
  • drinker — a person who drinks.
  • drucken — drunken
  • drunked — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of drink.
  • drunken — intoxicated; drunk.
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