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10-letter words containing n, o, k, i

  • stockiness — the quality of being stocky
  • stockinged — a close-fitting covering for the foot and part of the leg, usually knitted, of wool, cotton, nylon, silk, or similar material.
  • stockinger — a person who knits on a stocking frame
  • subkingdom — a category of related phyla within a kingdom.
  • talking of — You can use the expression talking of to introduce a new topic that you want to discuss, and to link it to something that has already been mentioned.
  • talking-to — a scolding.
  • tarkington — (Newton) Booth, 1869–1946, U.S. novelist and playwright.
  • think over — consider, deliberate
  • tick-borne — carried or transmitted by ticks: tick-borne disease.
  • tictocking — describing the sound of a clock ticking
  • timoshenko — Semion Konstantinovich [syi-myawn ken-stuhn-tyee-nuh-vyich] /syɪˈmyɔn kɛn stʌnˈtyi nə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1895–1970, Russian general.
  • tom knight — (person)   A noted hacker at MIT.
  • trackpoint — (hardware)   (Or "pointing stick", "nipple") A small knob found in the middle of some keyboards that works like a very short isometric joystick. Pressing it toward or away from you or from side to side moves the pointer on the screen. Ted Selker brought the concept of an in-keyboard pointing device to IBM in September 1987. TrackPoint was introduced in 1992 on the IBM ThinkPad and later on some desktops. It takes up virtually no extra room on the box or the work area and also requires minimal movement of the hands from the keyboard. Many imitations of highly variable quality appeared. Pointing sticks have also been used in many other notebook brands, including TI, HP, Compac, Dell, Toshiba (e.g. Portege 4000's "AccuPoint II"), and AST (e.g. Ascentia 910N). "TrackPoint" and "Trackpoint" are IBM trademarks.
  • triskelion — a symbolic figure consisting of three legs, arms, or branches radiating from a common center, as the device of Sicily and the Isle of Man.
  • tuck-point — to finish (masonry) with tuck pointing.
  • union jack — a jack consisting of the union of a national flag or ensign, as the U.S. jack, which has the white stars and blue field of the union of the U.S. national flag.
  • unshocking — causing intense surprise, disgust, horror, etc.
  • wake-robin — the cuckoopint.
  • walk in on — If you walk in on someone, you enter the room that they are in while they are doing something private, and this creates an embarrassing situation.
  • weak point — an area of weakness
  • wikinomics — The theory and practice of mass collaboration using electronic communications.
  • windows 2k — Windows 2000
  • winkle out — If you winkle information out of someone, you get it from them when they do not want to give it to you, often by tricking them.
  • work train — a train that transports railroad workers, building materials, etc., to construction or maintenance assignments on the railroad.
  • workingman — a man of the working class; a man, whether skilled or unskilled, who earns his living at some manual or industrial work.
  • yenakiyevo — a city in E Ukraine: suburb of Donetsk.
  • yukon time — the civil time officially adopted for a country or region, usually the civil time of some specific meridian lying within the region. The standard time zones in the U.S. (Atlantic time, Eastern time, Central time, Mountain time, Pacific time, Yukon time, Alaska-Hawaii time, and Bering time) use the civil times of the 60th, 75th, 90th, 105th, 120th, 135th, 150th, and 165th meridians respectively, the difference of time between one zone and the next being exactly one hour.
  • zinovievsk — a former name of Kirovograd.
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