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7-letter words containing k, i, t

  • kidlets — Plural form of kidlet.
  • kidults — Plural form of kidult.
  • killeth — Archaic third-person singular form of kill.
  • kilobit — 1024 (2 10) bits.
  • kiloton — a unit of weight, equal to 1000 tons.
  • kilting — any short, pleated skirt, especially a tartan wraparound, as that worn by men in the Scottish Highlands.
  • kilvert — Francis. 1840–79, British clergyman and diarist. His diary (published 1938–40) gives a vivid account of life in the Welsh Marches in the 1870s
  • kindest — of a good or benevolent nature or disposition, as a person: a kind and loving person.
  • kinetic — pertaining to motion.
  • kinetin — a synthetic cytokinin, C 10 H 9 ON 5 , that retards senescence in plants.
  • kineto- — moving, motion
  • king it — to act in a superior fashion
  • kinglet — a king ruling over a small country or territory.
  • kinston — a city in E North Carolina.
  • kiphuth — Robert J(ohn) H(erman) ("Bob") 1890–1967, U.S. swimming coach.
  • kirkton — a village or town with a parish church
  • kirsten — a female given name, Scandinavian form of Christine.
  • kirtans — Plural form of kirtan.
  • kirtles — Plural form of kirtle.
  • kisetla — a pidgin language based on Swahili, formerly used for communication between Europeans and Africans.
  • kistful — an amount that fills a kist
  • kit bag — a small bag or knapsack, as for a soldier.
  • kit car — a car that is supplied as a set of pieces ready to be assembled
  • kit fox — either of two small gray foxes, Vulpes macrotis and V. velox, found on plains and in open, sandy areas of western North America, commercially valuable for their fur.
  • kit out — a set or collection of tools, supplies, instructional matter, etc., for a specific purpose: a first-aid kit; a sales kit.
  • kit-cat — any of a series of half-length portraits of members of the Kit-Cat Club that were painted by Sir Godfrey Kneller between 1702 and 1717, measure almost uniformly 28 × 36 inches (71 × 91 cm), characteristically portray the head, upper torso, and hands, and are now in the National Gallery, London.
  • kit-fox — either of two small gray foxes, Vulpes macrotis and V. velox, found on plains and in open, sandy areas of western North America, commercially valuable for their fur.
  • kit-kat — any of a series of half-length portraits of members of the Kit-Cat Club that were painted by Sir Godfrey Kneller between 1702 and 1717, measure almost uniformly 28 × 36 inches (71 × 91 cm), characteristically portray the head, upper torso, and hands, and are now in the National Gallery, London.
  • kitchen — a room or place equipped for cooking.
  • kitchin — Obsolete form of kitchen.
  • kitenge — An African garment similar to the sarong, often worn by women wrapped around the chest or waist or as a headscarf or sling to carry a baby.
  • kithara — a musical instrument of ancient Greece consisting of an elaborate wooden soundbox having two arms connected by a yoke to which the upper ends of the strings are attached.
  • kíthira — a Greek island in the Mediterranean, S of Peloponnesus: site of former ancient temple of Aphrodite. 108 sq. mi. (280 sq. km).
  • kitimat — a seaport on the coast of W British Columbia, in SW Canada.
  • kitling — the young of any animal, especially a young cat; kitten; kit.
  • kitschy — something of tawdry design, appearance, or content created to appeal to popular or undiscriminating taste.
  • kitsune — (mythology) a Japanese fox spirit, normally female, said to have powers such as shape-shifting, and whose power is symbolized by increase in number of tails.
  • kittens — Plural form of kitten.
  • kitteny — of or like a kitten
  • kitties — Plural form of kitty.
  • kitting — a set or collection of tools, supplies, instructional matter, etc., for a specific purpose: a first-aid kit; a sales kit.
  • kittler — Comparative form of kittle.
  • kittles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of kittle.
  • klister — a sticky wax for use on skis, as for slopes where the snow is excessively wet.
  • knights — a comedy (424 b.c.) by Aristophanes.
  • knitted — made by knitting, as a cloth article: a knitted bedspread.
  • knitter — to make (a garment, fabric, etc.) by interlocking loops of one or more yarns either by hand with knitting needles or by machine.
  • knittle — (UK, dialect) A string that draws together a purse or bag.
  • komatik — A sled drawn by dogs, used by the people of Labrador.
  • kotwali — a police station.
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