7-letter words containing i, r, k
- corking — excellent
- crackie — a small noisy dog.
- cricked — a sharp, painful spasm of the muscles, as of the neck or back.
- cricket — Cricket is an outdoor game played between two teams. Players try to score points, called runs, by hitting a ball with a wooden bat.
- crinkle — If something crinkles or if you crinkle it, it becomes slightly creased or folded.
- crinkly — A crinkly object has many small creases or folds in it or in its surface.
- critick — Archaic spelling of critic.
- darkish — slightly dark: a darkish color.
- de-risk — to eliminate risk (from)
- deniker — Joseph [zhaw-zef] /ʒɔˈzɛf/ (Show IPA), 1852–1918, French anthropologist and naturalist.
- derrick — A derrick is a machine that is used to move cargo on a ship by lifting it in the air.
- dickers — Plural form of dicker.
- diquark — a low-energy configuration of two quarks attracted to one another by virtue of having antisymmetric colours and spins
- dirksen — Everett McKinley, 1896–1969, U.S. politician.
- disbark — (transitive) To strip of bark.
- dispark — to release from confinement
- disrank — to deprive (oneself or another) of rank, to demote
- dorkier — stupid, inept, or unfashionable.
- dorking — one of an English breed of chicken, having five toes on each foot instead of the usual four.
- dorkish — stupid or contemptible
- dornick — a small stone that is easy to throw.
- drinked — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of drink.
- drinker — a person who drinks.
- droukit — drenched; soaked
- drumkit — Alternative spelling of drum kit.
- duikers — Plural form of duiker.
- dunkirk — French Dunkerque [dœn-kerk] /dœ̃ˈkɛrk/ (Show IPA). a seaport in N France: site of the evacuation of a British expeditionary force of over 330,000 men under German fire May 29–June 4, 1940.
- duskier — Comparative form of dusky.
- dvornik — a Russian doorkeeper, caretaker, or groundsman
- earpick — an implement for picking at the ear and removing earwax
- einkorn — A form of wheat, Triticum monococcum, having a single grain.
- erlking — a malevolent spirit who carries children off to death
- erskine — Thomas, 1st Baron. 1750–1823, Scottish lawyer: noted as a defence advocate, esp in cases involving civil liberties
- eurisko — (artificial intelligence) A language for "opportunistic programming" written by Doug Lenat in 1978. Eurisko constructs its own methods and modifies its strategies as it tries to solve a problem.
- fabrick — Obsolete form of fabric.
- falkirk — an administrative district in the Central region, in S central Scotland. 110 sq. mi. (285 sq. km).
- faruk i — 1920–65, king of Egypt from 1936 until his abdication in 1952.
- finmark — the markka of Finland.
- firbank — (Arthur Annesley) Ronald. 1886–1926, English novelist, whose works include Valmouth (1919), The Flower beneath the Foot (1923), and Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli (1926)
- firkins — Plural form of firkin.
- flicker — to burn unsteadily; shine with a wavering light: The candle flickered in the wind and went out.
- forking — an instrument having two or more prongs or tines, for holding, lifting, etc., as an implement for handling food or any of various agricultural tools.
- frankie — a male given name, form of Frank.
- fricken — (slang) alternative spelling of fricking.
- frickle — (obsolete) A bushel basket.
- frisked — Simple past tense and past participle of frisk.
- frisker — One who frisks or dances.
- frisket — a mask of thin paper laid over an illustration to shield certain areas when using an airbrush.
- frolick — Archaic form of frolic.
- garlick — Archaic spelling of garlic.