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11-letter words containing k, o, t

  • eton jacket — a waist-length jacket with a V-shaped back, open in front, formerly worn by pupils of Eton College
  • exoskeletal — Pertaining to the exoskeleton.
  • exoskeleton — A rigid external covering for the body in some invertebrate animals, especially arthropods, providing both support and protection.
  • factorylike — Resembling a factory in any of various respects.
  • fast worker — a person who is quick and shrewd in gaining personal advantage: A fast worker, he soon knew everyone who had any pull.
  • fault block — a mass of rock bounded on at least two opposite sides by faults.
  • fit to kill — adapted or suited; appropriate: This water isn't fit for drinking. A long-necked giraffe is fit for browsing treetops.
  • folklorists — Plural form of folklorist.
  • folktronica — a musical genre that combines elements from folk and electronic music
  • footlockers — Plural form of footlocker.
  • forest park — a city in NW Georgia.
  • forethinker — someone who forethinks
  • fork-tender — (of food, especially meat) cooked so that it can be cut or pierced easily with a fork.
  • fort rucker — a military reservation and U.S. Army training center in SE Alabama, NW of Dothan.
  • forty winks — a short nap.
  • four-stroke — four-cycle.
  • french knot — an ornamental stitch made by looping the thread three or four times around the needle before putting it into the fabric
  • frost smoke — an ice fog caused by extremely cold air flowing over a body of comparatively warm water, especially in polar regions.
  • gamma stock — any of the third rank of active securities on the London Stock Exchange. Prices displayed by market makers are given as an indication rather than an offer to buy or sell
  • gazingstock — (archaic) An object, event or person that is stared at (or gazed at) by many people.
  • gentlefolks — (nonstandard) gentlefolk.
  • get back to — resume
  • go crook at — to rebuke or upbraid
  • goatsuckers — Plural form of goatsucker.
  • granny knot — a reef knot with the ends crossed the wrong way, making it liable to slip or jam
  • greenockite — a yellow mineral, cadmium sulfide, CdS, associated with zinc ores and used as a source of cadmium.
  • hair stroke — a fine line in writing or printing.
  • heart block — a defect in the electrical impulses of the heart resulting in any of various arrhythmias or irregularities in the heartbeat.
  • heartbroken — crushed with sorrow or grief.
  • heat stroke — a disturbance of the temperature-regulating mechanisms of the body caused by overexposure to excessive heat, resulting in fever, hot and dry skin, and rapid pulse, sometimes progressing to delirium and coma.
  • helmut kohl — Helmut [hel-moo t] /ˈhɛl mʊt/ (Show IPA), born 1930, German political leader: chancellor of West Germany (1982–90); chancellor of Germany 1990–98.
  • hideki tojo — Hideki [hee-de-kee] /ˈhi dɛˌki/ (Show IPA), 1884–1948, Japanese general: executed for war crimes.
  • honor trick — (in certain bidding systems) a high card or set of high cards that can reasonably be expected to take a trick, the total worth of such cards in a hand being the basis for evaluating its strength and bidding.
  • hot cockles — a children's game in which a blindfolded player is hit by one of the other players and then tries to guess which one did the hitting.
  • hot working — Hot working is a process in which a metal is shaped under pressure at a fairly high temperature.
  • hot-desking — the practice of not assigning permanent desks in a workplace, so that employees may work at any available desk
  • hotelkeeper — a manager or owner of a hotel.
  • http cookie — (web)   A small string of information sent by a web server to a web browser that will be sent back by the browser each time it accesses that server. Cookies were invented by Netscape to make it easier to maintain state between HTTP transactions. They can contain any arbitrary information the server chooses to put in them. The most common use of cookies is to identify and authenticate a user who has logged in to a website, so they don't have to sign in every time they visit. Other example uses are maintaining a shopping basket of goods you have selected to purchase during a session at an online shop or site personalisation (presenting different pages to different users). The browser limits the size of each cookie and the number each server can store. This prevents a malicious site consuming lots of disk space on the user's computer. The only information that cookies can return to the server is what that server previously sent out. The main privacy concern is that it is not obvious when a site is using cookies or what for. Even if you don't log in or supply any personal information to a site, it can still assign you a unique identifier and store it in a "tracking cookie". This can then be used to track every page you ever visit on the site. However, since it is possible to do the same thing without cookies, the UK law requiring sites to declare their use of cookies makes little sense and has been widely ignored. After using a shared computer, e.g. in an Internet cafe, you should remove all cookies to prevent the browser identifying the next user as you if they happen to visit the same sites.
  • husk tomato — ground cherry (def 1).
  • husk-tomato — ground-cherry
  • hypokinetic — abnormally diminished muscular function or mobility.
  • i know what — I have an idea
  • imparkation — the act of imparking
  • in lockstep — When members of the armed forces march in lockstep, they march very close to each other.
  • in the book — in all that is known and practiced in connection with a particular activity
  • in the dock — the place in a courtroom where a prisoner is placed during trial.
  • in the know — to perceive or understand as fact or truth; to apprehend clearly and with certainty: I know the situation fully.
  • in token of — something serving to represent or indicate some fact, event, feeling, etc.; sign: Black is a token of mourning.
  • interbroker — relating to interbroker dealers or their work
  • interlocked — Simple past tense and past participle of interlock.
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