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7-letter words containing k, l

  • kettled — Simple past tense and past participle of kettle.
  • kettles — Plural form of kettle.
  • kevalin — a person who is free of karmic matter, detached, and omniscient; Tirthankara.
  • keyhole — a hole for inserting a key in a lock, especially one in the shape of a circle with a rectangle having a width smaller than the diameter of the circle projecting from the bottom.
  • keyless — lacking a key or keys.
  • keyline — an outline image of something on artwork or plans to show where it is to be placed
  • keylock — any lock unlocked with a key.
  • keypals — Plural form of keypal.
  • keyslot — a short, curved slot cut into a shaft for a Woodruff key. Compare keyway (def 1).
  • khalasi — An Indian worker at a port or dockyard, traditionally employed in pulling vessels out of the water for maintenance and repair and returning them to the water afterwards.
  • khalifa — caliph.
  • khalkha — a Mongolian language that is the official language of the Mongolian People's Republic and the chief vernacular of the eastern half of the country.
  • khalkis — Chalcis.
  • kibbled — Simple past tense and past participle of kibble.
  • kidlets — Plural form of kidlet.
  • kidlike — Informal. a child or young person.
  • kidling — (archaic, poetic) A young kid; a baby goat.
  • kidults — Plural form of kidult.
  • kilauea — a crater on Mauna Loa volcano, on SE Hawaii island, in Hawaii. 2 miles (3.2 km) wide; 4040 feet (1231 meters) high.
  • kildare — a county in Leinster, in the E Republic of Ireland. 654 sq. mi. (1695 sq. km). County seat: Naas.
  • kilgore — a city in NE Texas.
  • killcow — an important, arrogant, or bullying person
  • killdee — killdeer.
  • killeen — a city in central Texas.
  • killers — Plural form of killer.
  • killeth — Archaic third-person singular form of kill.
  • killick — a small anchor or weight for mooring a boat, sometimes consisting of a stone secured by pieces of wood.
  • killing — the act of killing, especially game: The hounds moved in for the kill.
  • killjoy — a person who spoils the joy or pleasure of others; spoilsport.
  • kilobar — a unit of pressure, equal to 1000 bars (14,500 pounds per square inch; equivalent to 100 megapascals). Abbreviation: kb.
  • kilobit — 1024 (2 10) bits.
  • kilorad — one thousand rads
  • 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
  • kimball — a male given name.
  • kindjal — a double-edged knife of the Caucasus, having a broad blade with edges parallel for most of their length, terminating in a long, sharp point.
  • kindled — Simple past tense and past participle of kindle.
  • kindler — to start (a fire); cause (a flame, blaze, etc.) to begin burning.
  • kindles — Plural form of kindle.
  • kindlin — (protein) Any of a group of adhesion plaque proteins that activate integrins.
  • kinfolk — (in anthropological or formal use) a person's blood relations, regarded collectively.
  • kinglet — a king ruling over a small country or territory.
  • kinkily — In a kinky manner.
  • kinless — Without kin; familyless.
  • kinnellGalway, 1927–2014, U.S. poet.
  • kipling — (Joseph) Rudyard [ruhd-yerd] /ˈrʌd yərd/ (Show IPA), 1865–1936, English author: Nobel Prize 1907.
  • 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
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