0%

7-letter words containing i, c, p

  • pick at — to choose or select from among a group: to pick a contestant from the audience.
  • pick on — to choose or select from among a group: to pick a contestant from the audience.
  • pick up — to choose or select from among a group: to pick a contestant from the audience.
  • pick-up — to choose or select from among a group: to pick a contestant from the audience.
  • pickaxe — a pick, especially a mattock.
  • pickeer — to engage in skirmishes in advance of troops of an army.
  • pickensAndrew, 1739–1817, American Revolutionary general.
  • pickery — petty theft
  • pickettBill, 1871–1932, U.S. rodeo performer: famed as bulldogger.
  • picking — (in a loom) one passage of the shuttle.
  • pickled — preserved or steeped in brine or other liquid.
  • pickmaw — a type of gull with a black head
  • pickney — a child
  • pickoff — a move in baseball which involves the pitcher throwing the ball to a fielder
  • picotee — a variety of carnation, tulip, etc., having an outer margin of another color.
  • picquet — a card game played by two persons with a pack of 32 cards, the cards from deuces to sixes being excluded.
  • picrate — a salt or ester of picric acid.
  • picrite — a granular igneous rock composed chiefly of olivine and augite, but containing small amounts of feldspar.
  • pictish — the language of the Picts, apparently a Celtic language.
  • picture — a visual representation of a person, object, or scene, as a painting, drawing, photograph, etc.: I carry a picture of my grandchild in my wallet.
  • piculet — any of numerous small, tropical woodpeckers, chiefly of the genus Picumnus, that lack stiffened shafts in the tail feathers.
  • piddock — any bivalve mollusk of the genus Pholas or the family Pholadidae, having long, ovate shells and burrowing in soft rock, wood, etc.
  • piecing — a separate or limited portion or quantity of something: a piece of land; a piece of chocolate.
  • pierced — punctured or perforated, as to form a decorative design: a pendant in pierced copper.
  • piercer — to penetrate into or run through (something), as a sharp, pointed dagger, object, or instrument does.
  • pigface — a creeping succulent plant of the genus Carpobrotus, having bright-coloured flowers and red fruits and often grown for ornament: family Aizoaceae
  • pilcher — a scabbard for a sword, or a similar outer covering
  • pilcorn — a type of oat (Avena nuda) with an edible seed that can be husked easily
  • pilcrow — a paragraph mark.
  • pillock — idiot
  • pincase — a case for holding pins
  • pincers — a gripping tool consisting of two pivoted limbs forming a pair of jaws and a pair of handles (usually used with pair of).
  • pinched — to squeeze or compress between the finger and thumb, the teeth, the jaws of an instrument, or the like.
  • pincher — a person or thing that pinches.
  • pinchotGifford, 1863–1946, U.S. political leader, forester, and teacher.
  • pinnace — a light sailing ship, especially one formerly used in attendance on a larger ship.
  • pinnock — any of various small songbirds such as the dunnock
  • pinocle — a popular card game played by two, three, or four persons, with a 48-card deck.
  • piscary — Law. the right or privilege of fishing in particular waters.
  • piscean — a person born under the sign of Pisces.
  • piscina — a basin with a drain used for certain ablutions, now generally in the sacristy.
  • piscine — of, relating to, or resembling a fish or fishes.
  • pitched — sound: of a certain pitch
  • pitcherMolly (Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley) 1754–1832, American Revolutionary heroine.
  • placing — a particular portion of space, whether of definite or indefinite extent.
  • placoid — platelike, as the scales or dermal investments of sharks.
  • plasmic — Anatomy, Physiology. the liquid part of blood or lymph, as distinguished from the suspended elements.
  • plastic — Often, plastics. any of a group of synthetic or natural organic materials that may be shaped when soft and then hardened, including many types of resins, resinoids, polymers, cellulose derivatives, casein materials, and proteins: used in place of other materials, as glass, wood, and metals, in construction and decoration, for making many articles, as coatings, and, drawn into filaments, for weaving. They are often known by trademark names, as Bakelite, Vinylite, or Lucite.
  • pliancy — bending readily; flexible; supple; adaptable: She manipulated the pliant clay.
  • plicate — Also, plicated. folded like a fan; pleated.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?