7-letter words containing n, i, c, k
- nickels — Plural form of nickel.
- nickers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of nicker.
- nicking — a small notch, groove, chip, or the like, cut into or existing in something.
- nickles — Plural form of nickle.
- niddick — the nape of the neck
- nipmuck — a member of an Algonquian Indian people living in the vicinity of Worcester, Mass.
- nitpick — to be excessively concerned with or critical of inconsequential details.
- nowacki — ErrorTitleDiv {.
- nudnick — Alt form nudnik.
- nutpick — a thin, sharp-pointed table implement or device for removing the edible kernels from nuts.
- pack in — Hunting. a number of hounds, especially foxhounds and beagles, regularly used together in a hunt.
- packing — a group of things wrapped or tied together for easy handling or carrying; a bundle, especially one to be carried on the back of an animal or a person: a mule pack; a hiker's pack.
- panicky — a sudden overwhelming fear, with or without cause, that produces hysterical or irrational behavior, and that often spreads quickly through a group of persons or animals.
- pecking — to strike or indent with the beak, as a bird does, or with some pointed instrument, especially with quick, repeated movements.
- pick on — to choose or select from among a group: to pick a contestant from the audience.
- pickens — Andrew, 1739–1817, American Revolutionary general.
- picking — (in a loom) one passage of the shuttle.
- pickney — a child
- pinnock — any of various small songbirds such as the dunnock
- quicken — to make more rapid; accelerate; hasten: She quickened her pace.
- quincke — Angioedema.
- racking — Also called cloud rack. a group of drifting clouds.
- recking — to have care, concern, or regard (often followed by of, with, or a clause).
- renwick — James, 1818–95, U.S. architect.
- rocking — to move or sway to and fro or from side to side.
- rucking — a fold or wrinkle; crease.
- sack in — hit the sack
- sacking — the plundering of a captured place; pillage: the sack of Troy.
- sicking — sic1 .
- slicken — to make smooth
- snicker — to laugh in a half-suppressed, indecorous or disrespectful manner.
- snicket — a passageway between walls or fences
- sock in — to strike or hit hard.
- suck in — to draw into the mouth by producing a partial vacuum by action of the lips and tongue: to suck lemonade through a straw.
- sucking — not weaned.
- sunsick — suffering from mild heat exhaustion.
- tacking — a short, sharp-pointed nail, usually with a flat, broad head.
- thicken — make thicker
- think c — An extension of ANSI C for the Macintosh by Symantec Corporation. It supports object-oriented programming techniques similar to C++.
- ticking — a slight, sharp, recurring click, tap, or beat, as of a clock.
- ticknor — George, 1791–1871, U.S. literary historian and educator.
- tintack — a short nail made of tin-plated iron.
- tuck in — to put into a small, close, or concealing place: Tuck the money into your wallet.
- unslick — not slick
- unstick — to free, as one thing stuck to another.
- wicking — a bundle or loose twist or braid of soft threads, or a woven strip or tube, as of cotton or asbestos, which in a candle, lamp, oil stove, cigarette lighter, or the like, serves to draw up the melted tallow or wax or the oil or other flammable liquid to be burned.
- winnock — window.
- winsock — Windows sockets
- yacking — to talk, especially uninterruptedly and idly; gab; chatter: They've been yakking on the phone for over an hour.
- yucking — a loud, hearty laugh.