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8-letter words containing o, a, k, r

  • rockable — (of a chair, crib, etc) able to be rocked
  • rockabye — used in lullabies or nursery rhymes to encourage a baby to sleep
  • rockaway — a light, four-wheeled carriage having two or three seats and a fixed top.
  • rockface — an exposure of rock in a steep slope or cliff.
  • rockfall — an act or instance of the falling of rock, as in a cave-in or an avalanche.
  • rockland — a city in SE Massachusetts.
  • rollback — an act or instance of rolling back.
  • roorback — a false and more or less damaging report circulated for political effect, usually about a candidate seeking an office.
  • ropewalk — a long, narrow path or building where ropes are made.
  • row back — If you row back on something you have said or written, you express a different or contrary opinion about it.
  • run amok — If a person or animal runs amok, they behave in a violent and uncontrolled way.
  • sakharov — Andrei (Dmitrievich) [ahn-drey di-mee-tree-uh-vich;; Russian uhn-dryey dmyee-tryi-yi-vyich] /ˈɑn dreɪ dɪˈmi tri ə vɪtʃ;; Russian ʌnˈdryeɪ ˈdmyi tryɪ yɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1921–1989, Russian nuclear physicist and human-rights advocate: Nobel Peace Prize 1975.
  • saltwork — place where salt is refined
  • seatwork — work that can be done by a child at his or her seat in school without supervision.
  • shamrock — any of several trifoliate plants, as the wood sorrel, Oxalis acetosella, or a small, pink-flowered clover, Trifolium repens minus, but especially Trifolium procumbens, a small, yellow-flowered clover: the national emblem of Ireland.
  • skiatron — a cathode-ray tube used in radar
  • skyboard — a sport that is similar to skydiving but uses a special lightweight board (skyboard) attached to the feet and usually equipped with a parachute.
  • soapbark — a Chilean tree, Quillaja saponaria, of the rose family, having evergreen leaves and small, white flowers.
  • soekarno — Achmed [ahk-med] /ˈɑk mɛd/ (Show IPA), 1901–1970, Indonesian statesman: president of the Republic of Indonesia 1945–67.
  • take for — to get into one's hold or possession by voluntary action: to take a cigarette out of a box; to take a pen and begin to write.
  • takeover — the act of seizing, appropriating, or arrogating authority, control, management, etc.
  • takoradi — the chief port of Ghana, in the southwest on the Gulf of Guinea: modern harbour opened in 1928. Pop (with Sekondi): 335 000 (2005 est)
  • taskwork — work assigned or imposed as a task.
  • teamwork — cooperative or coordinated effort on the part of a group of persons acting together as a team or in the interests of a common cause.
  • topmaker — a wool dealer who specializes in selling wool tops to spinners
  • toymaker — a person who makes toys.
  • traprock — trap3 .
  • turkoman — a member of a Turkish people consisting of a group of tribes that inhabit the region near the Aral Sea and parts of Iran and Afghanistan.
  • wakeover — A sleepover party in a public place, such as a church, at which little or no sleep actually gets done.
  • walkover — Racing. a walking or trotting over the course by a contestant who is the only starter.
  • warlocks — Plural form of warlock.
  • waxworks — an exhibition of or a museum for displaying wax figures, ornaments, etc.
  • whakairo — the art of carving
  • woodlark — a small, European songbird, Lullula arborea, noted for its song in flight.
  • wordmark — (marketing) A logotype; a standardized graphic representation of the name of a company or product used for purposes of easy identification. It is is often text with unique typographic treatments. Usually the company name is incorporated together with simple graphic treatments, so that the representation of the word essentially becomes a symbol of the company.
  • workable — practicable or feasible: He needs a workable schedule.
  • workably — In an workable fashion.
  • workaday — of or befitting working days; characteristic of a workday and its occupations.
  • workbags — Plural form of workbag.
  • workboat — a boat used for work or trade rather than sport, public transportation, or military purposes.
  • workdays — Plural form of workday.
  • workfare — a governmental plan under which welfare recipients are required to accept public-service jobs or to participate in job training.
  • workload — the amount of work that a machine, employee, or group of employees can be or is expected to perform.
  • workmate — A person with whom one works.
  • worksafe — (of an internet link, etc) suitable for viewing in the workplace because of an absence of pornographic content
  • workwear — Clothes designed to be worn while working, especially in a physically demanding job.
  • yakitori — a dish of small pieces of boneless chicken, usually marinated, skewered, and grilled.
  • yardwork — (North America) Work done in maintaining a lawn, and related landscaping activities.
  • yearbook — a book published annually, containing information, statistics, etc., about the past year: an encyclopedia yearbook.
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