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7-letter words containing k, e, r, n

  • retaken — to take again; take back.
  • rethink — the act of reconsidering.
  • rewaken — to awaken again
  • roanoke — a city in SW Virginia.
  • rooinek — Briton; Britisher.
  • rysanek — Leonie [le-aw-nee] /ˈlɛ ɔˌni/ (Show IPA), 1926–98, Austrian soprano.
  • skanger — a young working-class person who dresses in casual sports clothes
  • skanker — Slang. to dance rhythmically in a loose-limbed manner.
  • skinker — a person who serves or pours liquor
  • skinner — B(urrhus) F(rederic) [bur-uh s] /ˈbɜr əs/ (Show IPA), 1904–90, U.S. psychologist and writer.
  • slinker — to walk about in a stealthy manner
  • snacker — a person who snacks or eats between main meals
  • sneaker — a high or low shoe, usually of fabric such as canvas, with a rubber or synthetic sole.
  • snicker — to laugh in a half-suppressed, indecorous or disrespectful manner.
  • snooker — a variety of pool played with 15 red balls and 6 balls of colors other than red, in which a player must shoot one of the red balls, each with a point value of 1, into a pocket before shooting at one of the other balls, with point values of from 2 to 7.
  • snorkel — Also called, British, snort. a device permitting a submarine to remain submerged for prolonged periods, consisting of tubes extended above the surface of the water to take in air for the diesel engine and for general ventilation and to discharge exhaust gases and foul air.
  • spanker — Nautical. a fore-and-aft sail on the aftermost lower mast of a sailing vessel having three or more masts. a designation given to the mast abaft a mizzenmast, usually the aftermost mast in any vessel.
  • starken — to become or make rigid or stiff, as in death
  • stinker — a person or thing that stinks.
  • stonker — to hit hard; knock unconscious.
  • swanker — dashing smartness, as in dress or appearance; style.
  • thanker — to express gratitude, appreciation, or acknowledgment to: She thanked them for their hospitality.
  • thinker — French Le Penseur. a bronze statue (1879–89) by Rodin.
  • trinket — a small ornament, piece of jewelry, etc., usually of little value.
  • trocken — (of wine, esp German wine) dry
  • trunker — the main stem of a tree, as distinct from the branches and roots.
  • turkmen — the language of the Turkman people, a Turkic language spoken mostly east of the Caspian Sea in Turkmenistan but also in parts of European Russia, Iran, and the Caucasus.
  • turnkey — a person who has charge of the keys of a prison; jailer.
  • ukraine — a republic in SE Europe: rich agricultural and industrial region. 223,090 sq. mi. (603,700 sq. km). Capital: Kiev.
  • unbrake — to stop braking; to release the brake(s)
  • unbroke — unbroken.
  • unraked — not raked or gathered together with a rake
  • wakener — One who wakens.
  • wankers — Plural form of wanker.
  • wankery — (British, slang, vulgar) Unnecessary or pretentious noodling (messing around).
  • winkers — Blocked leather eye shields attached to a (usually) harness bridle for horses, to prevent them from seeing backwards, and partially sideways; blinders in (USA).
  • winkler — a person who gathers periwinkles
  • wonkery — The quality or activities associated with being a wonk.
  • workend — a weekend where more time is spent doing housework than on relaxing or leisure pursuits
  • workmen — Plural form of workman.
  • wrinkle — an ingenious trick or device; a clever innovation: a new advertising wrinkle.
  • wryneck — Informal. torticollis. a person having torticollis.
  • yarkend — Shache.
  • yerking — to strike or whip.
  • yonkers — a city in SE New York, on the Hudson, near New York City.
  • younker — a youngster.
  • yukoner — a river flowing NW and then SW from NW Canada through Alaska to the Bering Sea. About 2000 miles (3220 km) long.
  • zernikeFrits [frits;; Dutch frits] /frɪts;; Dutch frɪts/ (Show IPA), 1888–1966, Dutch physicist: Nobel prize 1953.
  • zonkers — Plural form of zonker.
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