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6-letter words containing k, r

  • tonker — someone who tonks
  • tracks — a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
  • tranks — the piece of leather from which one glove is cut.
  • tricks — a crafty or underhanded device, maneuver, stratagem, or the like, intended to deceive or cheat; artifice; ruse; wile.
  • tricky — given to or characterized by deceitful tricks; crafty; wily.
  • troika — a Russian carriage, wagon, or sleigh drawn by a team of three horses abreast.
  • troked — truck2 (defs 4–7).
  • trunks — the main stem of a tree, as distinct from the branches and roots.
  • tuckerRichard, 1915–75, U.S. operatic tenor.
  • tugrik — an aluminum-bronze or cupronickel coin and monetary unit of the Mongolian People's Republic, equal to 100 mongo.
  • tunker — Dunker.
  • tureck — Rosalyn [roz-uh-lin] /ˈrɒz ə lɪn/ (Show IPA), 1914–2003, U.S. pianist.
  • turkey — a large, gallinaceous bird of the family Meleagrididae, especially Meleagris gallopavo, of America, that typically has green, reddish-brown, and yellowish-brown plumage of a metallic luster and that is domesticated in most parts of the world.
  • turkic — a family of closely related languages of southwest, central, and northern Asia and eastern Europe, including Turkish, Azerbaijani, Turkmen, Uzbek, Kirghiz, and Yakut.
  • turko- — Turkish, Turkic
  • tuskar — (in Orkney and Shetland) a peat-cutting spade
  • tusker — an animal with tusks, as an elephant or a wild boar.
  • uakari — any of several medium-sized, tree-dwelling Amazon basin monkeys of the genus Cacajao, the only New World monkeys having a short tail: all are now rare.
  • uckers — a board game similar to ludo, played by people in the navy
  • ukerna — United Kingdom Education and Research Networking Association
  • unbark — to strip of bark
  • uncork — to draw the cork from.
  • unrake — to unearth through raking
  • unwork — to destroy or undo (previous work)
  • uralsk — a city in W Kazakhstan, on the Ural River.
  • wacker — wacko.
  • walkerAlice, born 1944, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • wanker — a contemptible person; jerk.
  • wauker — a person who wauks cloth
  • weaker — not strong; liable to yield, break, or collapse under pressure or strain; fragile; frail: a weak fortress; a weak spot in armor.
  • weeker — (especially in combination with a number) Someone who participates in something for a certain number of weeks.
  • wesker — Sir Arnold. 1932–2016, British dramatist, whose plays include Roots (1959), Chips With Everything (1962), The Merchant (1976), Caritas (1981), and Break My Heart (1997)
  • wicker — a slender, pliant twig; osier; withe.
  • winker — a person or thing that winks.
  • worked — of, for, or concerning work: work clothes.
  • worker — a person or thing that works.
  • workup — an undesirable deposit of ink on a surface being printed, caused by the forcing into type-high position of quads or other spacing material.
  • wracks — Plural form of wrack.
  • wreaks — to inflict or execute (punishment, vengeance, etc.): They wreaked havoc on the enemy.
  • wrecks — Plural form of wreck.
  • wurruk — ErrorTitleDiv {.
  • yacker — yak2 .
  • yakker — to talk, especially uninterruptedly and idly; gab; chatter: They've been yakking on the phone for over an hour.
  • yanker — Someone who yanks, or gives a sudden hard pull.
  • yarmuk — a river in NW Jordan, flowing W into the Jordan River. 50 miles (80 km) long.
  • yerked — to strike or whip.
  • yerkesCharles Tyson, 1837–1905, U.S. financier and mass-transit magnate.
  • yikker — (of a bird or animal) to squeal or squeak sharply and repeatedly
  • yizkor — the Jewish service for commemorating the dead, held on Yom Kippur, Shemini Atzereth, the second day of Shavuoth, and the last day of Passover.
  • yonker — Obsolete spelling of younker.
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