7-letter words containing k, a, e, l
- crankle — a bend or twist
- darkled — Simple past tense and past participle of darkle.
- darkles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of darkle.
- de kalb — ˈJo‧hann (ˈjoʊhɑn ) ; yōˈhän) (born Johann Kalb) 1721-80; Fr. general, born in Germany, who served in the Am. Revolutionary army
- earlock — a lock of hair worn near or in front of the ear.
- fadlike — resembling a fad
- falkner — William, Faulkner, William.
- fanlike — any device for producing a current of air by the movement of a broad surface or a number of such surfaces.
- farkled — (jargon) /far'kld/ (From DeVry Institute of Technology, Atlanta) A synonym for hosed. Possibly related to Yiddish "farblondjet" and/or the "Farkle Family" skits on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In.
- fartlek — a training technique, used especially among runners, consisting of bursts of intense effort loosely alternating with less strenuous activity.
- fatlike — Resembling fat (the chemical substance) or some aspect of it.
- fd leak — file descriptor leak
- flacked — Simple past tense and past participle of flack.
- flacker — To flutter as a bird.
- flacket — a flagon, bottle, or flask for holding alcohol
- flakies — dandruff
- flanked — the side of an animal or a person between the ribs and hip.
- flanken — a strip of meat from the front end of the short ribs of beef.
- flanker — a person or thing that flanks.
- flasket — a small flask.
- gaskell — Mrs (Elizabeth Cleghorn Stevenson Gaskell) 1810–65, English novelist.
- glaiket — foolish; giddy; flighty.
- grackle — any of several long-tailed American birds of the family Icteridae, especially of the genus Quiscalus, having usually iridescent black plumage.
- hackled — Simple past tense and past participle of hackle.
- hackler — one of the long, slender feathers on the neck or saddle of certain birds, as the domestic rooster, much used in making artificial flies for anglers.
- hackles — one of the long, slender feathers on the neck or saddle of certain birds, as the domestic rooster, much used in making artificial flies for anglers.
- haeckel — Ernst Heinrich [ernst hahyn-rikh] /ɛrnst ˈhaɪn rɪx/ (Show IPA), 1834–1919, German biologist and philosopher of evolution.
- haglike — Resembling a hag or some aspect of one; hideous, cronelike.
- halleck — Fitz-Green [fits-green,, fits-green] /ˈfɪtsˌgrin,, fɪtsˈgrin/ (Show IPA), 1790–1867, U.S. poet.
- haskell — (language) (Named after the logician Haskell Curry) A lazy purely functional language largely derived from Miranda but with several extensions. Haskell was designed by a committee from the functional programming community in April 1990. It features static polymorphic typing, higher-order functions, user-defined algebraic data types, and pattern-matching list comprehensions. Innovations include a class system, systematic operator overloading, a functional I/O system, functional arrays, and separate compilation. Haskell 1.3 added many new features, including monadic I/O, standard libraries, constructor classes, labeled fields in datatypes, strictness annotations, an improved module system, and many changes to the Prelude. Mailing list: <[email protected]>. Yale Haskell - Version 2.0.6, Haskell 1.2 built on Common Lisp. Glasgow Haskell (GHC) - Version 2.04 for DEC Alpha/OSF2; HPPA1.1/HPUX9,10; SPARC/SunOs 4, Solaris 2; MIPS/Irix 5,6; Intel 80386/Linux,Solaris 2,FreeBSD,CygWin 32; PowerPC/AIX. GHC generates C or native code. E-mail: <[email protected]>. Haskell-B - Haskell 1.2 implemented in LML, generates native code. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
- hoylake — a town and resort in NW England, in Wirral unitary authority, Merseyside, on the Irish Sea. Pop: 25 524 (2001)
- jackleg — unskilled or untrained for one's work; amateur: a jackleg electrician.
- jamlike — similar to jam
- jawlike — resembling a jaw or pair of jaws.
- kalemie — a city in the E Democratic Republic of the Congo, on Lake Tanganyika.
- kalends — the first day of the month in the ancient Roman calendar, from which the days of the preceding month were counted backward to the ides.
- kantele — a Finnish stringed instrument, similar to a zither
- kaoline — Alternative spelling of kaolin.
- karelia — a region in the NW Russian Federation in Europe, comprising Lake Ladoga and Onega Lake and the adjoining area along the E border of Finland.
- kastler — Alfred [al-fred] /alˈfrɛd/ (Show IPA), 1902–84, French physicist, born in Germany: Nobel Prize 1966.
- kaylied — intoxicated; drunk
- keelage — a toll on a merchant ship entering a port.
- keelman — someone who works on a barge or who is in charge of a keel
- keitloa — a variety of the black rhinoceros having the posterior horn equal to or longer than the anterior horn.
- kelowna — a city in S British Columbia, in SW Canada.
- kendall — Edward Calvin, 1886–1972, U.S. biochemist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1950.
- kerbela — a town in central Iraq: holy city of the Shiʿite sect.
- kestral — Misspelling of kestrel.
- kevalin — a person who is free of karmic matter, detached, and omniscient; Tirthankara.
- keypals — Plural form of keypal.