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7-letter words containing k, e, t

  • fatlike — Resembling fat (the chemical substance) or some aspect of it.
  • fetlock — the projection of the leg of a horse behind the joint between the cannon bone and great pastern bone, bearing a tuft of hair.
  • flacket — a flagon, bottle, or flask for holding alcohol
  • flasket — a small flask.
  • frisket — a mask of thin paper laid over an illustration to shield certain areas when using an airbrush.
  • gaskets — Plural form of gasket.
  • glaiket — foolish; giddy; flighty.
  • gretzkyWayne ("The Great One") born 1961, Canadian ice hockey player.
  • grotesk — gothic (def 12).
  • heitiki — a Māori neck ornament of greenstone
  • hektare — a unit of surface, or land, measure equal to 100 ares, or 10,000 square meters: equivalent to 2.471 acres. Abbreviation: ha.
  • hockettCharles, 1916–2000, U.S. linguist and anthropologist.
  • hooklet — a little hook, used for example in zoology in reference to a tiny hook found on or in the body of an organism
  • hot key — an assigned key or sequence of keys programmed to execute a command or perform a specific task in a software application: On Windows computers, the hotkey Ctrl+S can be used to quickly save a file.
  • hotcake — A pancake.
  • in-take — the place or opening at which a fluid is taken into a channel, pipe, etc.
  • ink jet — a method of printing streams of electrically charged ink
  • inkster — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit.
  • intaken — Past participle of intake.
  • intaker — One who or that which takes or draws in.
  • intakes — Plural form of intake.
  • jackets — Plural form of jacket.
  • jet ski — small motorized water vehicle
  • jetlike — Resembling jet (the precious stone).
  • jetpack — a jet-powered backpack used by astronauts to move around in space away from a spacecraft.
  • junkets — Plural form of junket.
  • kainite — a mineral, hydrous sulfate of magnesium and potassium chloride, occurring in granular crystalline masses, a source of potassium salts.
  • kantele — a Finnish stringed instrument, similar to a zither
  • kapteyn — Jacobus Cornelis [yah-koh-bys kawr-ney-lis] /yɑˈkoʊ büs kɔrˈneɪ lɪs/ (Show IPA), 1851–1922, Dutch astronomer.
  • karaite — a member of a sect, founded in Persia in the 8th century a.d. by the religious leader Anan ben David, that rejected the Talmud and the teachings of the rabbis in favor of strict adherence to the Bible as the only source of Jewish law and practice.
  • kärnten — Carinthia
  • kassite — a member of an ancient people related to the Elamites, who ruled Babylonia from c1650 to c1100 b.c.
  • kastler — Alfred [al-fred] /alˈfrɛd/ (Show IPA), 1902–84, French physicist, born in Germany: Nobel Prize 1966.
  • kastner — Erich [ey-rikh] /ˈeɪ rɪx/ (Show IPA), 1899–1974, German writer.
  • katayev — Valentin Petrovich [vuh-lyin-tyeen pyi-traw-vyich] /və lyɪnˈtyin pyɪˈtrɔ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1897–1986, Russian writer.
  • katrineLoch, a lake in central Scotland. 8 miles (13 km) long.
  • keating — Paul. born 1944, Australian Labor politician; prime minister of Australia (1991–96)
  • keenest — finely sharpened, as an edge; so shaped as to cut or pierce substances readily: a keen razor.
  • keep at — to hold or retain in one's possession; hold as one's own: If you like it, keep it. Keep the change.
  • keep to — to hold or retain in one's possession; hold as one's own: If you like it, keep it. Keep the change.
  • keepest — Second-person singular present active indicative of keep.
  • keepnet — (nautical) A net strung on wire hoops and sealed at one end, suspended in water by anglers to keep alive the fish they have caught.
  • keester — the buttocks; rump.
  • keister — the buttocks; rump.
  • keiteleLake, a lake in S Finland. About 175 sq. mi. (455 sq. km).
  • keitloa — a variety of the black rhinoceros having the posterior horn equal to or longer than the anterior horn.
  • kenitra — a port in NW Morocco, NE of Rabat.
  • kenneth — a male given name: from an Irish word meaning “handsome.”.
  • kennett — a town in SE Missouri.
  • kenotic — the doctrine that Christ relinquished His divine attributes so as to experience human suffering.
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