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13-letter words containing k, a, m

  • katzenjammers — Plural form of katzenjammer.
  • kaufmann peak — former name of Lenin Peak.
  • kemal ataturk — (Mustafa or Mustapha Kemal"Kemal Pasha") 1881–1938, Turkish general: president of Turkey 1923–38.
  • keratomycosis — Fungal infection of the cornea.
  • kerosene lamp — light fuelled by paraffin
  • kilomegacycle — a unit of frequency, equal to 10 9 cycles per second. Abbreviation: kMc.
  • kim young sam — born 1927, president of South Korea 1993–98.
  • kinematically — the branch of mechanics that deals with pure motion, without reference to the masses or forces involved in it.
  • kinematograph — cinematograph.
  • king mackerel — a game fish, Scomberomorus cavalla, found in the western Atlantic Ocean.
  • king's ransom — an extremely large amount of money: The painting was sold for a king's ransom.
  • kingsley amisKingsley, 1922–95, English novelist.
  • kitchen match — a wooden friction match with a large head, used especially for igniting gas ovens or burners.
  • klamath falls — a city in SW Oregon.
  • kleptomaniacs — Plural form of kleptomaniac.
  • komodo dragon — the largest monitor lizard, Varanus komodoensis, of Komodo and other East Indian islands: grows to a length of 3 m (about 10 ft) and a weight of 135 kilograms (about 300 lbs.)
  • krishna menon — Vengalil Krishnan [ven-gah-leel krish-nuh n] /vɛnˈgɑ lil ˈkrɪʃ nən/ (Show IPA), 1897–1974, Indian politician and statesman.
  • kuskokwim bay — an inlet of the Bering Sea in Alaska. Length: about 160 km (100 miles)
  • kwame nkrumah — Kwame [kwah-mee] /ˈkwɑ mi/ (Show IPA), 1909–72, president of Ghana 1960–66.
  • labour market — When you talk about the labour market, you are referring to all the people who are able to work and want jobs in a country or area, in relation to the number of jobs there are available in that country or area.
  • lake maggiore — a lake in N Italy and S Switzerland, in the S Lepontine Alps
  • lake manitoba — a lake in W Canada, in S Manitoba: fed by the outflow from Lake Winnipegosis; drains into Lake Winnipeg. Area: 4706 sq km (1817 sq miles)
  • lake michigan — a state in the N central United States. 58,216 sq. mi. (150,780 sq. km). Capital: Lansing. Abbreviation: MI (for use with zip code), Mich.
  • lake-urumiyehLake. Urmia, Lake.
  • lane markings — white lines on the road that mark lanes
  • leukaemogenic — relating to the development of leukaemia, or causing leukaemia
  • lumber jacket — a short, straight, wool plaid jacket or coat, for informal wear, usually belted and having patch pockets.
  • lumberjackets — Plural form of lumberjacket.
  • mackerel gull — tern1 .
  • mackinaw boat — a flat-bottomed boat with sharp prow and square stern, propelled by oars and sometimes sails, formerly widely used on the upper Great Lakes.
  • mackinaw coat — a short double-breasted coat of a thick woolen material, commonly plaid.
  • macroplankton — planktonic organisms of about 1 mm in length.
  • magazine rack — shelf for storing periodicals
  • magnetic disk — Also called disk, hard disk. a rigid disk coated with magnetic material, on which data and programs can be stored.
  • make a living — earn money
  • make a market — If you make a market, you hold a large enough percentage of a stock to be able to change its price.
  • make a splash — If you make a splash, you become noticed or become popular because of something that you have done.
  • make light of — of little weight; not heavy: a light load.
  • make mischief — cause trouble
  • make no bones — If you make no bones about something, you talk openly about it, rather than trying to keep it a secret.
  • make off with — take away
  • make or break — either completely successful or utterly disastrous: a make-or-break marketing policy.
  • make position — the situation in which a short vowel may be regarded as long, that is, when it occurs before two or more consonants
  • make sb's day — If something makes your day, it makes you feel very happy.
  • make sport of — to mock or ridicule; poke fun at
  • make-or-break — either completely successful or utterly disastrous: a make-or-break marketing policy.
  • make-up class — a course of teaching in the application of make-up
  • mallemaroking — (historical, nautical) Carousing on icebound Greenland whaling ships.
  • mana motuhake — independence or autonomy
  • manage a risk — If you manage a risk, you analyze how much you are in danger from a particular risk or hazard, and decide how to best deal with it.
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