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7-letter words containing n, i, c, k

  • hicking — Present participle of hick.
  • hocking — the state of being deposited or held as security; pawn: She was forced to put her good jewelry in hock.
  • icerink — Alternative spelling of ice rink.
  • in hock — If someone is in hock, they are in debt.
  • in luck — the force that seems to operate for good or ill in a person's life, as in shaping circumstances, events, or opportunities: With my luck I'll probably get pneumonia.
  • ink sac — a large gland in most cephalopods, as the cuttlefish, octopus, and squid, that is near the rectum and ejects ink at predators.
  • ink-cap — any of several saprotrophic agaricaceous fungi of the genus Coprinus, whose caps disintegrate into a black inky fluid after the spores mature. It includes the shaggy ink-cap (Coprinus comatus), also called lawyer's wig, a distinctive fungus having a white cylindrical cap covered with shaggy white or brownish scales
  • jack in — abandon, quit
  • jacking — any of various portable devices for raising or lifting heavy objects short heights, using various mechanical, pneumatic, or hydraulic methods.
  • jacklin — Tony, full name Anthony Jacklin. born 1944, English golfer: won the British Open Championship (1969) and the US Open Championship (1970)
  • jocking — Present participle of jock.
  • jonnick — jannock.
  • kachina — any of various ancestral spirits deified by the Hopi Indians and impersonated in religious rituals by masked dancers.
  • kanchil — A small, agile chevrotain of the genus Tragulus.
  • katcina — kachina.
  • kenotic — the doctrine that Christ relinquished His divine attributes so as to experience human suffering.
  • ketonic — any of a class of organic compounds containing a carbonyl group, CO, attached to two alkyl groups, as CH 3 COCH 3 or CH 3 COC 2 H 5 .
  • kick in — to strike with the foot or feet: to kick the ball; to kick someone in the shins.
  • kick on — to strike with the foot or feet: to kick the ball; to kick someone in the shins.
  • kicking — A punishment or assault in which the victim is kicked repeatedly.
  • kincaidJamaica, born 1949, West Indian novelist and short-story writer.
  • kinchin — a child.
  • kinesic — the study of body movements, gestures, facial expressions, etc., as a means of communication.
  • kinetic — pertaining to motion.
  • kingcup — any of various common buttercups, as Ranunculus bulbosus, having bright-yellow flowers.
  • kinnock — Neil (Gordon). Baron. born 1942, British Labour politician, born in Wales; leader of the Labour Party (1983–92); a European commissioner (1995–2004) and vice-president of the European Commission (1999–2004)
  • kitchen — a room or place equipped for cooking.
  • kitchin — Obsolete form of kitchen.
  • knicker — (used attributively as a modifier) Of or relating to knickers.
  • koranic — Alternative spelling of Qur'anic.
  • kuching — a state in the federation of Malaysia, on NW Borneo: formerly a British crown colony (1946–63) and British protectorate (1888–1946). About 50,000 sq. mi. (129,500 sq. km). Capital: Kuching.
  • kutchin — a member of a group of North American Indians who live in the region of the lower Mackenzie River in northwestern Canada and the Yukon and Porcupine rivers of northeastern Alaska.
  • lacking — being without; not having; wanting; less: Lacking equipment, the laboratory couldn't undertake the research project.
  • licking — a stroke of the tongue over something.
  • linpack — 1. A package of linear algebra routines. 2. The kernel benchmark developed from the "LINPACK" package of linear algebra routines. It was written by Jack Dongarra <[email protected]> in Fortran and is commonly used in that language but there is also a C version. Source Code by FTP: single precision Fortran, double precision Fortran, C.
  • lock in — a device for securing a door, gate, lid, drawer, or the like in position when closed, consisting of a bolt or system of bolts propelled and withdrawn by a mechanism operated by a key, dial, etc.
  • lock-in — an act or instance of becoming unalterable, unmovable, or rigid.
  • locking — Present participle of lock.
  • lucking — Present participle of luck.
  • macdink — /mak'dink/ To make many incremental and unnecessary cosmetic changes to a program or file. Often the subject of the macdinking would be better off without them. The Macintosh is said to encourage such behaviour. See also fritterware, window shopping.
  • macking — a pimp.
  • maniack — Obsolete form of maniac.
  • minnick — to behave in a fussy way, esp with regards to the foods one chooses to eat
  • mocking — to attack or treat with ridicule, contempt, or derision.
  • muck in — If someone mucks in, they join in with an activity or help other people with a job and do not consider themselves to be too important to do it.
  • mucking — moist farmyard dung, decaying vegetable matter, etc.; manure.
  • nalchik — an autonomous republic in the Russian Federation in N Caucasia, N of the Georgian Republic. 4747 sq. mi. (12,295 sq. km). Capital: Nalchik.
  • necking — the part of the body of an animal or human being that connects the head and the trunk.
  • necktie — a band of decorative fabric worn around the neck, under the collar, and tied in front to hang down the front of a shirt or to form a small bow.
  • niblick — a club with an iron head, the face of which has the greatest slope of all the irons, for hitting the ball with maximum loft.
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