0%

8-letter words containing k, m, e

  • framekit — (language)   A frame language.
  • gamecock — a rooster of a fighting breed, or one bred and trained for fighting.
  • gamelike — an amusement or pastime: children's games.
  • gemsboks — Plural form of gemsbok.
  • gemsbuck — gemsbok.
  • gunmaker — a person or company that makes guns.
  • gunsmoke — Smoke produced by the firing of a gun.
  • hamerkop — Alternative spelling of hammerkop.
  • hatmaker — a maker of hats
  • haymaker — a person or machine that cuts hay and spreads it to dry.
  • headmark — a characteristic
  • hemlocks — Plural form of hemlock.
  • herkimerNicholas, 1728–77, American Revolutionary general.
  • home key — See under home row.
  • homelike — like or suggestive of home; familiar; warmly comfortable.
  • homesick — sad or depressed from a longing for home or family while away from them for a long time.
  • homework — schoolwork assigned to be done outside the classroom (distinguished from classwork).
  • humoresk — humorous musical composition
  • hymnlike — Resembling a hymn in form or sound.
  • ice milk — a frozen food similar to ice cream but made with skim milk.
  • icemaker — an appliance for making ice, especially ice cubes: Some refrigerators have built-in icemakers.
  • imbosked — Simple past tense and past participle of imbosk.
  • impocket — to put in a pocket
  • inkerman — a town in S Crimea, in S Ukraine: Russian defeat by the English and French 1854.
  • jerksome — Indicative of quick, rapid movements; jerky.Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed. (1989).
  • jokesome — Joky, humorous.
  • kakemono — a vertical hanging scroll containing either text or a painting, intended to be viewed on a wall and rolled when not in use.
  • kakiemon — a Japanese porcelain design credited to Kakiemon Sakaida, first produced in the 17th century and widely collected and imitated in the West
  • kamacite — a nickel-iron alloy found in meteorites.
  • kamikaze — (during World War II) a member of a special corps in the Japanese air force charged with the suicidal mission of crashing an aircraft laden with explosives into an enemy target, especially a warship.
  • kammerer — Paul. 1880–1926, Austrian zoologist: noted for his controversial experiments, esp with the midwife toad, apparently demonstrating the inheritance of acquired characteristics. Accused of fraud, he committed suicide
  • kemerovo — a city in the S Russian Federation in Asia, NE of Novosibirsk.
  • kemijoki — the longest river in Finland, flowing SW from Lapland to the Gulf of Bothnia. 345 miles (555 km) long.
  • keramics — ceramics.
  • keratoma — keratosis.
  • kermises — Plural form of kermis.
  • ketamine — a synthetic nonbarbiturate general anesthetic, C 13 H 16 ClNO, used to induce anesthesia, alone or in combination, in surgical or diagnostic procedures of short duration; extensively used in veterinary medicine.
  • ketimine — (organic chemistry) An imine derived from a ketone; general formula R2C=NR.
  • ketoxime — (organic chemistry) Any oxime derived from an ketone; general formula R2C=NOH.
  • keurboom — (South Africa) A species of tree, Virgilia oroboides, noted for it's pretty lilac flowers.
  • key lime — a yellow lime with a bitter rather than sour taste.
  • key move — the correct initial move in the solution of a set problem
  • keyframe — A single frame in an animation sequence drawn by an artist, between which others are tweened.
  • keysmash — a random string of letters and symbols typed out on a keyboard or touchscreen, used to signal intense emotion in written communication: The photo of the actor was accompanied by a heartfelt keysmash.
  • khameneiAyatollah Mohammed Ali, born 1939, chief Islamic leader of Iran since 1989.
  • khamseen — Alternative spelling of khamsin.
  • khomeini — Ayatollah Ruhollah [roo-hoh-luh;; Persian roo-haw-lah] /ruˈhoʊ lə;; Persian ˌru hɔˈlɑ/ (Show IPA), 1900?–89, Islamic leader of Iran 1979–89.
  • kiamusze — Jiamusi.
  • kilomole — one thousand moles
  • kimberly — a city in E Cape of Good Hope province, in the central Republic of South Africa: diamond mines.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?