6-letter words containing k, c
- deckel — a board, usually of stainless steel, fitted under part of the wire in a Fourdrinier machine for supporting the pulp stack before it is sufficiently formed to support itself on the wire.
- decker — Thomas Dekker
- deckle — a frame used to contain pulp on the mould in the making of handmade paper
- decoke — (informal) decarbonization.
- depack — (transitive,computing) To decompress (data).
- detick — to remove ticks from (an animal); free of ticks
- dicker — If you say that people are dickering about something, you mean that they are arguing or disagreeing about it, often in a way that you think is foolish or unnecessary.
- dickey — a man's detachable, or false, shirt front
- dickie — an article of clothing made to look like the front or collar of a shirt, blouse, vest, etc., worn as a separate piece under another garment, as a jacket or dress. Compare vest (def 2), vestee.
- dickty — high-class or stylish.
- docked — the solid or fleshy part of an animal's tail, as distinguished from the hair.
- docken — something of no value or importance
- docker — a person or thing that docks or cuts short.
- docket — Also called trial docket. a list of cases in court for trial, or the names of the parties who have cases pending.
- drinck — Obsolete form of drink.
- dubcek — Alexander, 1921–92, Czechoslovakian political leader: first secretary of the Communist Party 1968–69.
- ducked — to stoop or bend suddenly; bob.
- ducker — a person or thing that ducks.
- duckie — ducky1 .
- eckert — John Presper [pres-per] /ˈprɛs pər/ (Show IPA), 1919–95, U.S. engineer and computer pioneer.
- eirack — a young hen in its first year
- enlock — to lock or secure
- ethick — Obsolete form of ethic.
- eucken — Rudolph Christoph (ˈruːdɔlf ˈkrɪstɔf). 1846–1926, German idealist philosopher: Nobel prize for literature 1908
- facked — Simple past tense and past participle of fack.
- feckly — almost, mostly
- fickle — Changing frequently, esp. as regards one's loyalties, interests, or affection.
- fickly — (obsolete) In a fickle manner.
- finick — to affect extreme daintiness or refinement.
- flacks — Plural form of flack.
- flecks — Plural form of fleck.
- flecky — a speck; a small bit: a fleck of dirt.
- flicks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flick.
- flicky — (slang) Easily flicked; thus, light and fast.
- flocks — Plural form of flock.
- flocky — like or characterized by flocks or tufts; flocculent.
- franck — César (Auguste) [sey-zar oh-gyst] /seɪˈzar oʊˈgüst/ (Show IPA), 1822–90, French composer, born in Belgium.
- frocks — Plural form of frock.
- fucked — to have sexual intercourse with.
- fucker — an inconsequential, annoying, or disgusting person.
- fuckup — a person who bungles or botches, especially a habitual bungler.
- geckos — Plural form of gecko.
- h-back — a wingback or slotback
- hacked — to place (something) on a hack, as for drying or feeding.
- hackee — (US, dialect) The chickaree or red squirrel.
- hacker — a person, as an artist or writer, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and mediocre work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts: As a painter, he was little more than a hack.
- hackie — hack2 (def 7b).
- hackle — 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.
- hackly — rough or jagged, as if hacked: Some minerals break with a hackly fracture.
- hawick — a town in SE Scotland, in S central Scottish Borders: knitwear industry. Pop: 14 573 (2001)