7-letter words containing i, c, e, k
- pricket — a sharp metal point on which to stick a candle.
- prickle — a sharp point.
- quicken — to make more rapid; accelerate; hasten: She quickened her pace.
- quicker — done, proceeding, or occurring with promptness or rapidity, as an action, process, etc.; prompt; immediate: a quick response.
- quickie — a book, story, movie, etc., usually trivial in quality, requiring only a short time to produce.
- quincke — Angioedema.
- recking — to have care, concern, or regard (often followed by of, with, or a clause).
- renwick — James, 1818–95, U.S. architect.
- rickets — a disease of childhood, characterized by softening of the bones as a result of inadequate intake of vitamin D and insufficient exposure to sunlight, also associated with impaired calcium and phosphorus metabolism.
- rickety — likely to fall or collapse; shaky: a rickety chair.
- rockies — Rocky Mountains.
- saclike — a baglike structure in an animal, plant, or fungus, as one containing fluid.
- seasick — afflicted with seasickness.
- shicker — alcoholic liquor.
- sickbed — the bed used by a sick person.
- sickert — Walter Richard, 1860–1942, English painter.
- siclike — suchlike
- skeptic — a person who questions the validity or authenticity of something purporting to be factual.
- slicken — to make smooth
- slicker — a smooth or slippery place or spot or the substance causing it: oil slick.
- smicker — beautiful, pretty or handsome
- smicket — a woman's under-garment or smock
- snicker — to laugh in a half-suppressed, indecorous or disrespectful manner.
- snicket — a passageway between walls or fences
- sticker — a person or thing that sticks.
- stickle — to argue or haggle insistently, especially on trivial matters.
- tackies — a sneaker.
- thicken — make thicker
- thicker — having relatively great extent from one surface or side to the opposite; not thin: a thick slice.
- thicket — a thick or dense growth of shrubs, bushes, or small trees; a thick coppice.
- tickell — Thomas, 1686–1740, English poet and translator.
- tickets — a slip, usually of paper or cardboard, serving as evidence that the holder has paid a fare or admission or is entitled to some service, right, or the like: a railroad ticket; a theater ticket.
- tickled — to touch or stroke lightly with the fingers, a feather, etc., so as to excite a tingling or itching sensation in; titillate.
- tickler — a person or thing that tickles.
- tieback — a strip or loop of material, heavy braid, or the like, used for holding a curtain back to one side.
- tricked — a crafty or underhanded device, maneuver, stratagem, or the like, intended to deceive or cheat; artifice; ruse; wile.
- tricker — a crafty or underhanded device, maneuver, stratagem, or the like, intended to deceive or cheat; artifice; ruse; wile.
- trickle — to flow or fall by drops, or in a small, gentle stream: Tears trickled down her cheeks.
- truckie — a truck driver
- vickers — Jon, born 1926, Canadian operatic tenor.
- viereck — Peter, 1916–2006, U.S. poet and historian.
- wackier — Comparative form of wacky.
- whicker — to whinny; neigh.
- wickers — Plural form of wicker.
- wickets — Plural form of wicket.
- wickies — Plural form of wicky.
- yuckier — Comparative form of yucky.
- zincked — Simple past tense and past participle of zinc.