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7-letter words containing o, k, l, a

  • 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.
  • matlock — a town in England, on the River Derwent, administrative centre of Derbyshire: mineral springs. Pop: 11 265 (2001)
  • molokai — an island in central Hawaii: leper colony. 259 sq. mi. (670 sq. km).
  • molokan — a member of an ascetic religious sect, founded in Russia in the 18th century by former Doukhobors, opposing sacraments and ritual and stressing the authority of the Bible.
  • norwalk — a city in SW California.
  • oakdale — a town in E Minnesota.
  • oakland — a seaport in W California, on San Francisco Bay.
  • oakleaf — (often, attributive) The leaf of the oak.
  • oaklike — resembling or having similarities to an oak leaf or tree
  • oakling — an immature or not fully-grown oak tree
  • oaklisp — (language)   A portable object-oriented Scheme by K. Lang and Barak Perlmutter of Yale. Oaklisp uses a superset of Scheme syntax. It is based on generic operations rather than functions, and features anonymous classes, multiple inheritance, a strong error system, setters and locators for operations and a facility for dynamic binding. Version 1.2 includes an interface, bytecode compiler, run-time system and documentation.
  • oarlock — any of various devices providing a pivot for an oar in rowing, especially a swiveling, crutchlike or ringlike metal device projecting above a gunwale.
  • oatlike — a cereal grass, Avena sativa, cultivated for its edible seed.
  • odalisk — a female slave or concubine in a harem, especially in that of the sultan of Turkey.
  • oilcake — a cake or mass of linseed, cottonseed, soybean, or the like, from which the oil has been extracted or expressed, used as food for livestock.
  • opelika — a city in E Alabama.
  • outtalk — to outdo or overcome in talking.
  • outwalk — to outdo in walking; walk faster or farther than.
  • padlock — a portable or detachable lock with a pivoted or sliding shackle that can be passed through a link, ring, staple, or the like.
  • palooka — an athlete, especially a boxer, lacking in ability, experience, or competitive spirit.
  • pokable — to prod or push, especially with something narrow or pointed, as a finger, elbow, stick, etc.: to poke someone in the ribs.
  • polatsk — a city in N Belarus, on the Dvina River.
  • pollack — a food fish, Pollachius pollachius, of the cod family, inhabiting coastal North Atlantic waters from Scandinavia to northern Africa.
  • poptalk — (language, product)   A commercial object-oriented derivative of POP, from Cambridge Consultants, used in the expert system MUSE.
  • protalk — Quintus. An object-oriented Prolog.
  • rockall — an uninhabited British island in the N Atlantic, 354 km (220 miles) W of the Outer Hebrides. Area: 0.07 ha (0.18 acres)
  • rokelay — a type of short cloak
  • seafolk — the people who sail the sea
  • sialkot — a city in NE Pakistan: military station.
  • skatole — a white, crystalline, watersoluble solid, C 9 H 9 N, having a strong, fecal odor: used chiefly as a fixative in the manufacture of perfume.
  • slavkov — Czech name of Austerlitz.
  • taglock — a matted lock of wool or hair.
  • talk to — speak to, address
  • talooka — a hereditary estate.
  • tokelau — an island group in the South Pacific composed of three atolls, Nukunono, Atafu, and Fakaofo; dependent territory of New Zealand. Pop: 1368 (2012 est). Area: about 11 sq km (4 sq miles)
  • uncloak — to remove the cloak from.
  • volapuk — one of the earliest of the artificially constructed international auxiliary languages, invented about 1879.
  • walk on — Also called walking part. a small part in a play or other entertainment, especially one without speaking lines. Compare bit2 (def 6).
  • walk-on — Also called walking part. a small part in a play or other entertainment, especially one without speaking lines. Compare bit2 (def 6).
  • walkout — a strike by workers.
  • warlock — a man who professes or is supposed to practice magic or sorcery; a male witch; sorcerer.
  • zelkova — any of several trees of the genus Zelkova, native to Asia, related to and resembling the elms.
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