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7-letter words containing k, i, l, n

  • linpack — 1. A package of linear algebra routines. 2. The kernel benchmark developed from the "LINPACK" package of linear algebra routines. It was written by Jack Dongarra <[email protected]> in Fortran and is commonly used in that language but there is also a C version. Source Code by FTP: single precision Fortran, double precision Fortran, C.
  • lock in — a device for securing a door, gate, lid, drawer, or the like in position when closed, consisting of a bolt or system of bolts propelled and withdrawn by a mechanism operated by a key, dial, etc.
  • lock-in — an act or instance of becoming unalterable, unmovable, or rigid.
  • locking — Present participle of lock.
  • look in — If you look in on a person or place, you visit them for a short time, usually when you are on your way somewhere else.
  • look-in — a brief glance.
  • looking — to turn one's eyes toward something or in some direction in order to see: He looked toward the western horizon and saw the returning planes.
  • lordkin — a little lord
  • lucking — Present participle of luck.
  • lumpkin — a heavy or clumsy person
  • lurking — to lie or wait in concealment, as a person in ambush; remain in or around a place secretly or furtively.
  • malinke — a member of an agricultural people living in Senegal, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, and Ivory Coast.
  • malkins — Plural form of malkin.
  • manlike — resembling a human being; anthropoid.
  • menelik — 1844–1913, emperor of Ethiopia 1889–1913.
  • milking — Present participle of milk.
  • milkman — a person who sells or delivers milk.
  • milkmen — Plural form of milkman.
  • nalchik — an autonomous republic in the Russian Federation in N Caucasia, N of the Georgian Republic. 4747 sq. mi. (12,295 sq. km). Capital: Nalchik.
  • netlike — a bag or other contrivance of strong thread or cord worked into an open, meshed fabric, for catching fish, birds, or other animals: a butterfly net.
  • niblick — a club with an iron head, the face of which has the greatest slope of all the irons, for hitting the ball with maximum loft.
  • nickels — Plural form of nickel.
  • nickles — Plural form of nickle.
  • nikopol — a city in SE Ukraine, on the Dnieper River.
  • norilsk — a city in the N Russian Federation in Asia, near the mouth of the Yenisei River.
  • nunlike — Resembling a nun or some aspect of one.
  • nutlike — Resembling a nut.
  • oakling — an immature or not fully-grown oak tree
  • oilskin — a cotton fabric made waterproof by treatment with oil and used for rain gear and fishermen's clothing.
  • palinka — a type of apricot brandy, originating in Central and Eastern Europe
  • plinker — a person who shoots a handgun recreationally
  • silking — the soft, lustrous fiber obtained as a filament from the cocoon of the silkworm.
  • skinful — the amount that a skin container can hold.
  • skyline — the boundary line between earth and sky; the apparent horizon: A sail appeared against the skyline.
  • slaking — to allay (thirst, desire, wrath, etc.) by satisfying.
  • slatkin — Leonard. born 1944, US conductor; musical director of the St Louis Symphony Orchestra (1979–96) and of the National Symphony Orchestra (1996–2008)
  • slicken — to make smooth
  • slinked — to move or go in a furtive, abject manner, as from fear, cowardice, or shame.
  • slinker — to walk about in a stealthy manner
  • sunlike — (often initial capital letter) the star that is the central body of the solar system, around which the planets revolve and from which they receive light and heat: its mean distance from the earth is about 93 million miles (150 million km), its diameter about 864,000 miles (1.4 million km), and its mass about 330,000 times that of the earth; its period of surface rotation is about 26 days at its equator but longer at higher latitudes.
  • talking — to communicate or exchange ideas, information, etc., by speaking: to talk about poetry.
  • tlinkit — Tlingit.
  • tolkien — J(ohn) R(onald) R(euel) [roo-uh l] /ˈru əl/ (Show IPA), 1892–1973, English novelist, philologist, and teacher, born in South Africa.
  • twinkle — to shine with a flickering gleam of light, as a star or distant light.
  • unalike — not at all similar
  • unliked — not enjoyed or considered agreeable
  • unslick — not slick
  • walk-in — of or relating to persons who walk into a place from the street, especially irregularly or without an appointment: walk-in customers; walk-in sales; a walk-in patient.
  • walking — considered as a person who can or does walk or something that walks: The hospital is caring for six walking patients. He's walking proof that people can lose weight quickly.
  • weblink — A web address; the address of a document or resource on the World Wide Web.
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