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7-letter words containing k, r

  • broking — acting as a broker
  • brooked — to bear; suffer; tolerate: I will brook no interference.
  • brookie — the brook trout of eastern North America.
  • brubeck — Dave. 1920–2012, US modern jazz pianist and composer; formed his own quartet in 1951
  • bruckle — brittle, fragile
  • bryansk — a city in W Russia. Pop: 428 000 (2005 est)
  • buckler — a small round shield worn on the forearm or held by a short handle
  • buckner — Simon Bolivar [bol-uh-ver] /ˈbɒl ə vər/ (Show IPA), 1823–1914, U.S. Confederate general and politician.
  • buckram — cotton or linen cloth stiffened with size, etc, used in lining or stiffening clothes, bookbinding, etc
  • bukhara — a city in S Uzbekistan. Pop: 299 000 (2005 est)
  • bulwark — A bulwark against something protects you against it. A bulwark of something protects it.
  • bunraku — a Japanese form of puppet theatre in which the puppets are usually about four feet high, with moving features as well as limbs and each puppet is manipulated by up to three puppeteers who remain onstage
  • bur oak — an E North American oak, Quercus macrocarpa, having fringed acorn cups and durable timber
  • burbank — Luther1849-1926; U.S. horticulturist: bred numerous varieties of fruits, vegetables, & flowers
  • burdock — a coarse weedy Eurasian plant of the genus Arctium, having large heart-shaped leaves, tiny purple flowers surrounded by hooked bristles, and burlike fruits: family Asteraceae (composites)
  • burke'sMartha Jane, 1852?–1903, Calamity Jane.
  • burking — to murder, as by suffocation, so as to leave no or few marks of violence.
  • burkini — a swimming costume which covers the whole body with the exception of the face, hands, and feet, suitable for wear by Muslim women
  • burkite — burker; murderer
  • burlesk — a bawdy comedy show of the late 19th and early 20th centuries: the striptease eventually became one of its chief elements
  • by-work — work done in addition to one's regular work, as in intervals of leisure.
  • c quark — the quark having electric charge 2/3 times the elementary charge and charm C = +1. It is more massive than the up, down, and strange quarks.
  • cackler — A person or creature that cackles.
  • cankers — Plural form of canker.
  • cankery — having a canker or cankers
  • caprock — a layer of rock that overlies a salt dome
  • carcake — a small cake, made with eggs and sometimes blood, traditionally eaten on Shrove Tuesday
  • carjack — to attack (a driver in a car) in order to rob the driver or to steal the car for another crime
  • carking — distressful.
  • carlock — a type of Russian isinglass made from the bladder of a sturgeon
  • carrack — a galleon sailed in the Mediterranean as a merchantman in the 15th and 16th centuries
  • carrick — Alternative spelling of carrack.
  • carsick — nauseated from riding in a car or other vehicle
  • caulker — a person who caulks the seams of boats or the like.
  • cd rack — a rack for storing CDs
  • chakras — Plural form of chakra.
  • charked — Simple past tense and past participle of chark.
  • charkha — (in India) a spinning wheel, esp for cotton
  • charpakGeorges [zhawrzh] /ʒɔrʒ/ (Show IPA), 1924–2010, French physicist, born in Poland: Nobel Prize 1992.
  • checker — Checkers is a game for two people, played with 24 round pieces on a board.
  • chikara — the attribute of might or force
  • chocker — full up; packed
  • chokers — Plural form of choker.
  • chucker — a person who throws something
  • chukars — Plural form of chukar.
  • chukker — any of the periods of play, each lasting 7 or 71⁄2 minutes, into which a polo match is divided
  • chunker — (programming)   A program like Unix's "split" which breaks an input file into parts, usually of a pre-set size, e.g. the maximum size that can fit on a floppy. The parts can then be assembled with a dechunker, which is usually just the chunker in a different mode.
  • clacker — an object that makes a clacking sound
  • clanker — Something that makes a clanking noise.
  • clarkia — any North American onagraceous plant of the genus Clarkia: cultivated for their red, purple, or pink flowers
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