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5-letter words containing k, r

  • creek — A creek is a narrow place where the sea comes a long way into the land.
  • crick — If you have a crick in your neck or in your back, you have a pain there caused by muscles becoming stiff.
  • croak — When a frog or bird croaks, it makes a harsh, low sound.
  • crock — A crock is a clay pot or jar.
  • cronk — unfit; unsound
  • crook — A crook is a dishonest person or a criminal.
  • cruck — one of a pair of curved wooden timbers supporting the end of the roof in certain types of building
  • crunk — a form of hip-hop music originating in the southern states of the US
  • cukorGeorge, 1899–1983, U.S. film director.
  • dakar — the capital and chief port of Senegal, on the SE side of Cape Verde peninsula. Pop: 2 313 000 (2005 est)
  • daker — a unit of commodities equivalent to ten
  • dakir — Alternative form of daker.
  • darke — Obsolete spelling of dark.
  • darks — Plural form of dark.
  • darky — an offensive word for a Black person
  • derek — a masculine name: var. Derrick; equiv. Du. Dirk
  • dhikr — a meeting of dervishes at which a phrase containing a name of God is chanted rhythmically to induce a state of ecstasy.
  • diker — A ditcher.
  • dirke — Obsolete form of dirk.
  • dirks — Plural form of dirk.
  • dorks — Plural form of dork.
  • dorky — stupid, inept, or unfashionable.
  • drack — (esp of a woman) unattractive
  • drakeSir Francis, c1540–96, English admiral and buccaneer: sailed around the world 1577–80.
  • drank — a simple past tense and past participle of drink.
  • dreck — excrement; dung.
  • dreks — excrement; dung.
  • drink — to take water or other liquid into the mouth and swallow it; imbibe.
  • droke — a valley with steeply sloping sides.
  • drouk — to wet thoroughly; drench.
  • drunk — being in a temporary state in which one's physical and mental faculties are impaired by an excess of alcoholic drink; intoxicated: The wine made him drunk.
  • eskar — (geology) Alternative form of esker.
  • esker — A long ridge of gravel and other sediment, typically having a winding course, deposited by meltwater from a retreating glacier or ice sheet.
  • faker — anything made to appear otherwise than it actually is; counterfeit: This diamond necklace is a fake.
  • fakir — a Muslim or Hindu religious ascetic or mendicant monk commonly considered a wonder-worker.
  • farik — young wheat that has been fire-roasted, then threshed and dried: usually cooked by boiling.
  • forks — an instrument having two or more prongs or tines, for holding, lifting, etc., as an implement for handling food or any of various agricultural tools.
  • forky — forked.
  • frack — Used as a euphemism for ‘fuck’.
  • frank — direct and unreserved in speech; straightforward; sincere: Her criticism of my work was frank but absolutely fair.
  • freak — a fleck or streak of color.
  • freck — (transitive, rare, poetic) To checker; to diversify.
  • freke — A brave man, a warrior, a man-at-arms.
  • frickHenry Clay, 1849–1919, U.S. industrialist, art patron, and philanthropist.
  • frink — /frink/ The unknown ur-verb, fill in your own meaning. Found especially on the Usenet newsgroup news:alt.fan.lemurs, where it is said that the lemurs know what "frink" means, but they aren't telling. Compare gorets.
  • frisk — to dance, leap, skip, or gambol; frolic: The dogs and children frisked about on the lawn.
  • frock — a gown or dress worn by a girl or woman.
  • frosk — (dialectal) A frog.
  • glark — /glark/ To figure something out from context. "The System III manuals are pretty poor, but you can generally glark the meaning from context." Interestingly, the word was originally "glork"; the context was "This gubblick contains many nonsklarkish English flutzpahs, but the overall pluggandisp can be glorked [sic] from context" (David Moser, quoted by Douglas Hofstadter in his "Metamagical Themas" column in the January 1981 "Scientific American"). It is conjectured that hackish usage mutated the verb to "glark" because glork was already an established jargon term. Compare grok, zen.
  • glork — /glork/ 1. Used as a name for just about anything. See foo. 2. Similar to glitch, but usually used reflexively. "My program just glorked itself." See also glark.
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