7-letter words containing k, i, t
- rickets — a disease of childhood, characterized by softening of the bones as a result of inadequate intake of vitamin D and insufficient exposure to sunlight, also associated with impaired calcium and phosphorus metabolism.
- rickety — likely to fall or collapse; shaky: a rickety chair.
- rooikat — a South African lynx, Felis caracal
- rootkit — malicious software that allows an unauthorized user to maintain access to a computer by concealing programs and processes, files, or data from the operating system.
- saktism — Shaktism.
- schtick — shtick.
- shticky — having the characteristics of shtick
- sialkot — a city in NE Pakistan: military station.
- sickert — Walter Richard, 1860–1942, English painter.
- sickout — an organized absence from work by employees on the pretext of sickness, as to avoid the legal problems or antistrike clauses that would be invoked in the case of a formal strike.
- skating — for skating
- skelpit — slapped
- skeptic — a person who questions the validity or authenticity of something purporting to be factual.
- ski tow — Also called rope tow. a type of ski lift in which skiers are hauled up a slope while grasping a looped, endless rope driven by a motor.
- skillet — a frying pan.
- skippet — a small, round box for protecting an official or personal seal, as on a document.
- skipton — a market town in N England, in North Yorkshire: 11th-century castle. Pop: 14 313 (2001)
- skirret — a plant, Sium sisarum, of the parsley family, cultivated in Europe for its edible tuberous root.
- skirted — the part of a gown, dress, slip, or coat that extends downward from the waist.
- skirter — a man who skirts fleeces
- skiting — to boast; brag.
- skitter — to go, run, or glide lightly or rapidly.
- skittle — skittles, (used with a singular verb) ninepins in which a wooden ball or disk is used to knock down the pins.
- slatkin — Leonard. born 1944, US conductor; musical director of the St Louis Symphony Orchestra (1979–96) and of the National Symphony Orchestra (1996–2008)
- sleekit — sleeky.
- smicket — a woman's under-garment or smock
- snicket — a passageway between walls or fences
- sputnik — (sometimes initial capital letter) any of a series of Soviet earth-orbiting satellites: Sputnik I was the world's first space satellite.
- staking — something that is wagered in a game, race, or contest.
- sticker — a person or thing that sticks.
- stickit — (of a task or product) imperfect; ruined.
- stickle — to argue or haggle insistently, especially on trivial matters.
- stickum — any adhesive substance.
- stickup — a holdup; robbery.
- stikine — a river in NW British Columbia, Canada and SE Alaska, flowing W and SW to the Pacific Ocean: important route in 1890s Klondike gold rush. 335 miles (539 km) long.
- stinker — a person or thing that stinks.
- stoking — to poke, stir up, and feed (a fire).
- stookie — stucco
- stricks — a group of any of the major bast fibers, as flax or jute, prepared for conversion into sliver form.
- striker — a person or thing that strikes.
- tackies — a sneaker.
- tackify — to make (tyres, rubber balls, etc) tacky
- tacking — a short, sharp-pointed nail, usually with a flat, broad head.
- tadzhik — Tajik.
- taglike — resembling a tag
- take in — the act of taking.
- take it — to get into one's hold or possession by voluntary action: to take a cigarette out of a box; to take a pen and begin to write.
- take-in — a deception, fraud, or imposition.
- takings — You can use takings to refer to the amount of money that a business such as a shop or a cinema gets from selling its goods or tickets during a particular period.
- talkies — talking picture.