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9-letter words containing i, c, e, k

  • racketing — Slang. an occupation, livelihood, or business. an easy or profitable source of livelihood.
  • ragpicker — a person who picks up rags and other waste material from the streets, refuse heaps, etc., for a livelihood.
  • raincheck — a ticket for future use given to spectators at an outdoor event, as a baseball game or concert, that has been postponed or interrupted by rain.
  • ranchlike — resembling or characteristic of a ranch
  • reckoning — count; computation; calculation.
  • rein back — To rein back something such as spending means to control it strictly.
  • requicken — to restore or come back to life or vigour
  • rice cake — puffed-rice snack food
  • ricketily — in a rickety or shaky manner
  • ridgeback — Rhodesian ridgeback.
  • rock-like — Something that is rock-like is very strong or firm, and is unlikely to change.
  • rockiness — the state or condition of a person who is shaky or unsteady, as from drinking, fatigue, or illness.
  • rockslide — a fall of rocks down a hillside
  • rockville — a city in central Maryland.
  • rudbeckia — any composite plant of the genus Rudbeckia, having alternate leaves and showy flower heads.
  • sack time — time spent sleeping.
  • sackvilleThomas, 1st Earl of Dorset, 1536–1608, English statesman and poet.
  • scalelike — Zoology. one of the thin, flat, horny plates forming the covering of certain animals, as snakes, lizards, and pangolins. one of the hard, bony or dentinal plates, either flat or denticulate, forming the covering of certain other animals, as fishes.
  • schematik — A NeXT front-end to MIT Scheme for the NeXT by Chris Kane and Max Hailperin <[email protected]>. Schematik provides syntax-knowledgeable text editing, graphics windows and a user-interface to an underlying MIT Scheme process. It comes with MIT Scheme 7.1.3 ready to install on the NeXT and requires NEXTSTEP. Version: 1.1.5.2.
  • schnittkeAlfred, 1934–1998, Russian composer.
  • screaking — screeching or creaking
  • seed tick — the six-legged nymphal form of a tick, somewhat resembling a seed.
  • semitruck — tractor-trailer.
  • sheeptick — a wingless, bloodsucking, dipterous insect, Melophagus ovinus, that is parasitic on sheep.
  • shickered — intoxicated; drunk.
  • shipwreck — the destruction or loss of a ship, as by sinking.
  • sick note — proof of illness
  • sick-lied — not strong; unhealthy; ailing.
  • sickening — causing or capable of causing sickness, especially nausea, disgust, or loathing: sickening arrogance.
  • sickleman — a person reaping with a sickle
  • sicklemia — the usually asymptomatic hereditary condition that occurs when a person inherits from only one parent the abnormal hemoglobin gene characteristic of sickle cell anemia.
  • sicklemic — relating to sicklemia
  • sicknurse — someone who nurses a sick person
  • sidecheck — a checkrein passing from the bit to the saddle of a harness.
  • sidetrack — any railroad track, other than a siding, auxiliary to the main track.
  • skeptical — doubtful about a particular thing: My teacher thinks I can get a scholarship, but I'm skeptical.
  • sketch in — If you sketch in details about something, you tell them to people.
  • sketching — a simply or hastily executed drawing or painting, especially a preliminary one, giving the essential features without the details.
  • skiascope — retinoscope.
  • skin care — the cleansing, massaging, moisturizing, etc., of the skin, especially the face or hands.
  • slickener — a tool used for slickening
  • slickster — a crafty and opportunistic or deceitful person; hustler; swindler.
  • smethwick — a city in West Midlands, in central England, near Birmingham.
  • snickered — to laugh in a half-suppressed, indecorous or disrespectful manner.
  • snickerer — someone who snickers
  • socked in — to strike or hit hard.
  • sollicker — force; momentum.
  • special k — an animal anaesthetic, ketamine hydrochloride, sold illegally as a hallucinogenic drug
  • spikedace — a scaleless, mottled, olive-brown fish, Meda fulgida, of the Gila River system in New Mexico and Arizona, having two dorsal spines.
  • steinbeck — John (Ernst) [urnst] /ɜrnst/ (Show IPA), 1902–68, U.S. novelist: Nobel prize 1962.
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