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9-letter words containing k, t, h

  • rockshaft — an oscillating shaft.
  • sackcloth — sacking.
  • saltchuck — the ocean.
  • schematik — A NeXT front-end to MIT Scheme for the NeXT by Chris Kane and Max Hailperin <[email protected]>. Schematik provides syntax-knowledgeable text editing, graphics windows and a user-interface to an underlying MIT Scheme process. It comes with MIT Scheme 7.1.3 ready to install on the NeXT and requires NEXTSTEP. Version: 1.1.5.2.
  • schnittkeAlfred, 1934–1998, Russian composer.
  • shake out — If you shake out a cloth or a piece of clothing, you hold it by one of its edges and move it up and down one or more times, in order to open it out, make it flat, or remove dust.
  • shark net — a net for catching sharks
  • sheeptick — a wingless, bloodsucking, dipterous insect, Melophagus ovinus, that is parasitic on sheep.
  • sheetlike — resembling a sheet
  • sheetrock — a trademark name for plasterboard or drywall, composed of gypsum enclosed by heavy sheets of paper and used for constructing interior walls and ceilings
  • shift key — a typewriter key that determines whether characters are printed in upper or lower case and controls the printing of numbers and symbols.
  • shiftwork — a system of employment where an individual's normal hours of work are, in part, outside the period of normal day working and may follow a different pattern in consecutive periods of weeks
  • shortcake — a cake made with a relatively large amount of butter or other shortening.
  • shot silk — silk woven to give a changing colour effect
  • shotmaker — a sports player delivering good shots
  • sketch in — If you sketch in details about something, you tell them to people.
  • sketching — a simply or hastily executed drawing or painting, especially a preliminary one, giving the essential features without the details.
  • sketchpad — sketchbook (def 1).
  • skintight — fitting almost as tightly as skin: skintight trousers.
  • smethwick — a city in West Midlands, in central England, near Birmingham.
  • southwark — a borough of Greater London, England, S of the Thames.
  • stakhanov — a city in E Ukraine, W of Lugnask.
  • stinkhorn — any of various rank-smelling, brown-capped mushrooms of the genus Phallus, especially P. impudicus.
  • stockfish — fish, as the cod or haddock, cured by splitting and drying in the air without salt.
  • stockholm — a kingdom in N Europe, in the E part of the Scandinavian Peninsula. 173,732 sq. mi. (449,964 sq. km). Capital: Stockholm.
  • stockhorn — pibgorn.
  • stokehold — Also, stokehold [stohk-hohld] /ˈstoʊkˌhoʊld/ (Show IPA). fireroom.
  • stokehole — Also, stokehold [stohk-hohld] /ˈstoʊkˌhoʊld/ (Show IPA). fireroom.
  • tacmahack — tacamahac.
  • take hold — become established
  • talk shop — a retail store, especially a small one.
  • talk show — a radio or television show in which a host interviews or chats with guests, especially celebrity guests.
  • talkathon — an unusually long speech or discussion, especially on a matter of public interest, as a Congressional filibuster or a televised question-and-answer session with a political candidate.
  • tchotchke — an inexpensive souvenir, trinket, or ornament.
  • technikon — a technical college
  • thackeray — William Makepeace [meyk-pees] /ˈmeɪkˌpis/ (Show IPA), 1811–63, English novelist, born in India.
  • thank god — to express gratitude, appreciation, or acknowledgment to: She thanked them for their hospitality.
  • thank you — expressing one's gratitude or thanks: a thank-you note.
  • thank-you — expressing one's gratitude or thanks: a thank-you note.
  • thankings — expressions of gratitude or acts of thanking
  • thankless — not likely to be appreciated or rewarded; unappreciated: a thankless job.
  • thanks to — to express gratitude, appreciation, or acknowledgment to: She thanked them for their hospitality.
  • the backs — the grounds between the River Cam and certain Cambridge colleges
  • the chuck — dismissal
  • the docks — the area around a wharf or pier, used for the mooring, loading, unloading, and repair of ships
  • the drink — the sea
  • the kiwis — the men's international Rugby League football team of New Zealand
  • the koine — the Ancient Greek dialect that was the lingua franca of the empire of Alexander the Great and was widely used throughout the E Mediterranean area in Roman times
  • the stake — a stick or post pointed at one end for driving into the ground as a boundary mark, part of a fence, support for a plant, etc.
  • the thick — the busiest or most intense part
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