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7-letter words containing k, n

  • bantock — Sir Granville. 1868–1946, British composer. His works include the Hebridean Symphony (1915), five ballets, and three operas
  • barking — mad; crazy
  • barmkin — the outer fortification of a castle, or the battlement thereof
  • basking — to lie in or be exposed to a pleasant warmth: to bask in the sunshine.
  • beaking — Present participle of beak.
  • beatnik — Beatniks were young people in the late 1950's who rejected traditional ways of living, dressing, and behaving. People sometimes use the word beatnik to refer to anyone who lives in an unconventional way.
  • becking — a gesture used to signal, summon, or direct someone.
  • beckons — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of beckon.
  • beinked — being daubed with ink
  • beknave — to treat as a knave
  • beknown — known about
  • bethank — to thank
  • bethink — to cause (oneself) to consider or meditate
  • betoken — If something betokens something else, it is a sign of this thing.
  • bikaner — a walled city in NW India, in Rajasthan: capital of the former state of Bikaner, on the edge of the Thar Desert. Pop: 529 007 (2001)
  • bilking — to defraud; cheat: He bilked the government of almost a million dollars.
  • biobank — any large store of human biological samples for research into the genetic and environmental causes of disease
  • blacken — To blacken something means to make it black or very dark in colour. Something that blackens becomes black or very dark in colour.
  • blanker — (of paper or other writing surface) having no marks; not written or printed on: a blank sheet of paper.
  • blanket — A blanket is a large square or rectangular piece of thick cloth, especially one which you put on a bed to keep you warm.
  • blankly — without expression or understanding: She stared blankly at her inquisitors.
  • blinked — to open and close the eye, especially involuntarily; wink rapidly and repeatedly.
  • blinker — a flashing light for sending messages, as a warning device, etc, such as a direction indicator on a road vehicle
  • blunker — a person who prints cloths
  • bodikin — a small body
  • bonkers — If you say that someone is bonkers, you mean that they are silly or act in a crazy way.
  • bonnock — a thick oatmeal cake; bannock
  • book in — When you book into a hotel or when you book in, you officially state that you have arrived to stay there, usually by signing your name in a register.
  • bookend — Bookends are a pair of supports used to hold a row of books in an upright position by placing one at each end of the row.
  • booking — A booking is the arrangement that you make when you book something such as a hotel room, a table at a restaurant, a theatre seat, or a place on public transport.
  • bookman — a student or scholar
  • boomkin — a short boom projecting from the deck of a ship, used to secure the main-brace blocks or to extend the lower edge of the foresail
  • borking — to attack (a candidate or public figure) systematically, especially in the media.
  • bowknot — a decorative knot usually having two loops and two loose ends; bow
  • bracken — Bracken is a large plant with leaves that are divided into many thin sections. It grows on hills and in woods.
  • braking — the act or process of slowing or stopping a vehicle, wheel, shaft, etc, or for keeping it stationary, esp by means of friction
  • brakpan — a city in E South Africa: gold-mining centre. Pop: 62 116 (2001)
  • bricken — made of bricks
  • brisken — to make or become more lively or brisk
  • brocken — a mountain in central Germany: the highest peak of the Harz Mountains; important in German folklore. Height: 1142 m (3747 ft). The Brocken Bow or Brocken Spectre is an atmospheric phenomenon in which an observer, when the sun is low, may see his enlarged shadow against the clouds, often surrounded by coloured lights
  • broking — acting as a broker
  • bryansk — a city in W Russia. Pop: 428 000 (2005 est)
  • buckeen — (in Ireland) a poor young man who aspires to the habits and dress of the wealthy
  • bucking — bukh.
  • buckner — Simon Bolivar [bol-uh-ver] /ˈbɒl ə vər/ (Show IPA), 1823–1914, U.S. Confederate general and politician.
  • budokon — a self-help program based on Japanese principles that incorporates yoga, martial arts, and meditation
  • bulking — the expansion of excavated material to a volume greater than that of the excavation from which it came
  • bumpkin — If you refer to someone as a bumpkin, you think they are uneducated and stupid because they come from the countryside.
  • bundook — (in India) a rifle
  • bunking — a built-in platform bed, as on a ship.
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