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10-letter words containing k, l, e, n

  • herakleion — a seaport in N Crete.
  • herrenvolk — master race.
  • hucklebone — hipbone.
  • hyperlinks — Plural form of hyperlink.
  • index-link — index (def 25).
  • inglenooks — Plural form of inglenook.
  • ink bottle — a bottle containing ink
  • ink roller — a roller impregnated with ink used in printing
  • inkle loom — a simple narrow loom used for weaving long decorative tapes and bands.
  • insectlike — Resembling an insect in any of various attributes such as form, behavior, or sound.
  • interlaken — a town in central Switzerland between the lakes of Brienz and Thun: tourist center.
  • interlinks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of interlink.
  • interlocks — Plural form of interlock.
  • jack plane — a plane for rough surfacing.
  • jailbroken — an escape from prison, especially by forcible means.
  • john locke — Alain LeRoy [al-in luh-roi,, lee-roi] /ˈæl ɪn ləˈrɔɪ,, ˈli rɔɪ/ (Show IPA), 1886–1954, U.S. educator and author.
  • junglelike — Resemblng a jungle.
  • kalanchoes — Plural form of kalanchoe.
  • kallikrein — a type of protease that liberates kinins from kininogens
  • kefallinia — Cephalonia
  • kenilworth — a town in central Warwickshire, in central England, SE of Birmingham.
  • kennelling — Present participle of kennel.
  • kenspeckle — conspicuous; easily seen or recognized.
  • keogh plan — a pension plan for an unincorporated business entity or self-employed person.
  • kernelling — the softer, usually edible part contained in the shell of a nut or the stone of a fruit.
  • kernmantel — denoting a type of mountaineering rope
  • kesselring — Albert [al-bert;; German ahl-bert] /ˈæl bərt;; German ˈɑl bɛrt/ (Show IPA), 1885–1960, German field marshal.
  • keylogging — the practice of using a software program or hardware device (keylogger) to record all keystrokes on a computer keyboard, either overtly as a surveillance tool or covertly as spyware: Many employers are making use of keylogging to monitor their employees' computer habits.
  • keyserling — Hermann Alexander [her-mahn ah-le-ksahn-duh r] /ˈhɛr mɑn ˌɑ lɛˈksɑn dər/ (Show IPA), Count, 1880–1946, German philosopher and writer.
  • kiel canal — a canal connecting the North and Baltic seas. 61 miles (98 km) long.
  • kilderkins — Plural form of kilderkin.
  • kiln-dried — of or relating to the reduction of the moisture content in wood by means of artificially controlling the heat, air circulation, and humidity.
  • kilner jar — a glass preserving jar with an airtight lid, used for bottling fruit or vegetables
  • kindliness — the state or quality of being kindly; benevolence.
  • king devil — any of several European hawkweeds introduced into northeastern North America, where they are troublesome weeds.
  • kingliness — stately or splendid, as resembling, suggesting, or befitting a king; regal: He strode into the room with a kingly air.
  • kingsolverBarbara, born 1955, U.S. novelist, short-story writer, and essayist.
  • kingsville — a city in S Texas.
  • kiteflying — an act or instance of flying a kite.
  • kittenlike — Resembling a kitten or some aspect of one.
  • klagenfurt — a province in S Austria. 3681 sq. mi. (9535 sq. km). Capital: Klagenfurt.
  • klangfarbe — instrumental timbre or tone colour
  • klendusity — (in plants) the ability to resist disease
  • kline test — a test for syphilis in which the formation of a microscopic precipitate in a mixture of the patient's serum and an antigen indicates a syphilitic condition.
  • klutziness — clumsy; awkward: If you weren't so klutzy you wouldn't have dropped it.
  • knightless — not suitable or seemly for a knight
  • knightlike — Knightly; bold, gallant, etc.
  • know-ledge — acquaintance with facts, truths, or principles, as from study or investigation; general erudition: knowledge of many things.
  • knowledged — Simple past tense and past participle of knowledge.
  • knowledges — Plural form of knowledge.
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