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8-letter words containing k, o, t

  • cockatoo — A cockatoo is a kind of parrot from Australia or New Guinea which has a bunch of feathers called a crest on its head.
  • cockboat — any small boat
  • cockloft — a small loft, garret, or attic
  • cockpits — Plural form of cockpit.
  • cockshut — dusk
  • cocktail — A cocktail is an alcoholic drink which contains several ingredients.
  • cokernut — coconut.
  • comstockAnthony, 1844–1915, U.S. author and reformer.
  • conk out — If something such as a machine or a vehicle conks out, it stops working or breaks down.
  • conk-out — to break or fail, as a machine or engine (often followed by out): The engine conked out halfway there.
  • cookouts — Plural form of cookout.
  • cooktops — Plural form of cooktop.
  • cootikin — a cloth gaiter
  • corktree — type of evergreen oak tree
  • crackpot — If you describe someone or their ideas as crackpot, you disapprove of them because you think that their ideas are strange and crazy.
  • crockets — Plural form of crocket.
  • crockett — David, known as Davy Crockett. 1786–1836, US frontiersman, politician, and soldier
  • crockpot — a brand of electric slow cooker
  • cronkiteWalter, 1916–2009, U.S. newscaster.
  • crookest — sick or feeble.
  • cytokine — any of various proteins, secreted by cells, that carry signals to neighbouring cells. Cytokines include interferon
  • darktown — a part of a town or city inhabited largely by blacks.
  • datebook — a notebook in which a person keeps a personal record of daily events, appointments, etc
  • deck out — If a person or thing is decked out with or in something, they are decorated with it or wearing it, usually for a special occasion.
  • desknote — a computer that is similar in size to a notebook computer, but is designed to remain stationary, like a desktop computer
  • desktops — Plural form of desktop.
  • diestock — a frame for holding a number of standard threaded dies for cutting screw threads.
  • diketone — a compound containing two C=O groups, as CH 3 COCOCH 3 .
  • ditokous — producing two young or laying two eggs at a time.
  • docketed — Simple past tense and past participle of docket.
  • dog tick — any of a variety of ticks, as the American dog tick, that commonly infest dogs and may transmit Rocky Mountain spotted fever or tularemia to humans.
  • downtake — a pipe or passage for conducting smoke, a current of air, or the like downward from a furnace, opening, etc.
  • downtick — a decline or deterioration in business activity, in mood, etc.
  • drink to — to take water or other liquid into the mouth and swallow it; imbibe.
  • duck out — leave secretly
  • ductwork — a system of ducts used for a particular purpose, as in a ventilation or heating system.
  • eniwetok — an atoll in the W Pacific Ocean, in the NW Marshall Islands: taken by the US from Japan in 1944; became a naval base and later a testing ground for atomic weapons. Pop: 820 (1999 est)
  • factbook — A book of facts.
  • fake out — to deceive or outmaneuver as by a feint, bluff, or deceptive act
  • fake-out — prepare or make (something specious, deceptive, or fraudulent): to fake a report showing nonexistent profits.
  • fatstock — livestock that has been fattened for market.
  • fetlocks — Plural form of fetlock.
  • fink out — a strikebreaker.
  • flatwork — sheets, tablecloths, etc., that are ordinarily ironed mechanically, as on a mangle, rather than by hand.
  • flokatis — Plural form of flokati.
  • flunkout — a person who has flunked out of school or a course.
  • folk art — artistic works, as paintings, sculpture, basketry, and utensils, produced typically in cultural isolation by untrained often anonymous artists or by artisans of varying degrees of skill and marked by such attributes as highly decorative design, bright bold colors, flattened perspective, strong forms in simple arrangements, and immediacy of meaning.
  • folkmoot — (formerly, in England) a general assembly of the people of a shire, town, etc.
  • folktale — a tale or legend originating and traditional among a people or folk, especially one forming part of the oral tradition of the common people.
  • footlike — resembling a foot
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