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7-letter words containing o, k, a

  • kia ora — greetings! good luck!
  • kilobar — a unit of pressure, equal to 1000 bars (14,500 pounds per square inch; equivalent to 100 megapascals). Abbreviation: kb.
  • kilorad — one thousand rads
  • klaxons — Plural form of klaxon.
  • kobarid — a village in W Slovenia, formerly in Italy: defeat of the Italians by the Germans and Austrians 1917.
  • kocaeli — Izmit.
  • koekoea — a common New Zealand cuckoo, Eudynamis taitensis, found in forest areas
  • koftgar — (in India) a person skilled in the art of inlaying steel with gold (koftgari)
  • kokanee — any of several lacustrine sockeye salmons.
  • kokkola — a seaport in E Finland, on the Gulf of Bothnia.
  • kokowai — a type of clay used in decoration because of its red colour
  • kolache — a sweet bun filled with jam or pulped fruit.
  • kolacky — a sweet bun filled with jam or pulped fruit.
  • kolbasi — kielbasa
  • kolchak — Aleksandr Vasilyevich [uh-lyi-ksahndr vuh-syee-lyi-vyich] /ʌ lyɪˈksɑndr vʌˈsyi lyɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1874–1920, Russian counterrevolutionary and admiral.
  • kolkata — a seaport in and the capital of West Bengal state, in E India, on the Hugli River: former capital of British India.
  • kolomna — a city in the W Russian Federation in Europe, SE of Moscow.
  • komatik — A sled drawn by dogs, used by the people of Labrador.
  • konakri — a seaport in and the capital of Guinea, in NW Africa.
  • konarak — a village in E Odisha, in E India: site of the famous Black Pagoda.
  • konkani — a dialect of Marathi spoken in coastal Maharashtra in western India.
  • kopiyka — A monetary unit of Ukraine, equal to one-hundredth of a hryvna.
  • koradji — boyla.
  • koranic — Alternative spelling of Qur'anic.
  • korowai — a decorative woven cloak worn by a Māori chief
  • kosovar — also Kosovan
  • kotwali — a police station.
  • kotwals — Plural form of kotwal.
  • kronachLucas ("the Elder") 1472–1553, German painter and graphic artist.
  • kyathos — a deep bowl set on a foot, often having a high voluted or serpentine handle rising from the brim and terminating immediately above the juncture of the body and the stem: used for ladling wine into drinking cups.
  • lake no — a lake in South Sudan, where the Bahr el Jebel (White Nile) is joined by the Bahr el Ghazal. Area: about 103 sq km (40 sq miles)
  • laokoon — Classical Mythology. a priest of Apollo at Troy who warned the Trojans of the Trojan Horse, and who, with his two sons, was killed by two huge serpents sent by Athena or Apollo.
  • lapwork — a type of craftwork in which there are parts or edges that overlap each other
  • lawbook — a book consisting or treating of laws, legal issues, or cases that have been adjudicated.
  • leacock — Stephen (Butler) 1869–1944, Canadian humorist and economist.
  • leukoma — a dense, white opacity of the cornea.
  • lockage — the construction, use, or operation of locks, as in a canal or stream.
  • lockean — an adherent of the philosophy of Locke.
  • lockjaw — tetanus in which the jaws become firmly locked together; trismus.
  • lockman — (Scotland, archaic) A public executioner.
  • lockram — a rough-textured linen cloth.
  • mack on — a pimp.
  • maddock — (obsolete) an earthworm, a maggot.
  • make do — something that serves as a substitute, especially of an inferior or expedient nature: We had to get along with make-dos during the war.
  • make of — to bring into existence by shaping or changing material, combining parts, etc.: to make a dress; to make a channel; to make a work of art.
  • make-do — something that serves as a substitute, especially of an inferior or expedient nature: We had to get along with make-dos during the war.
  • makedoc — A program from Carleton University, Ottawa that generates documentation for Objective C programs. It will also generate a class hierarchy diagram. The output format is similar to that used by StepStone.
  • makeout — Of, involving, or suited to making out.
  • makonde — a member of a people living in northeastern Mozambique and southeastern Tanzania, renowned as woodcarvers.
  • mammock — a fragment; scrap.
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