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7-letter words containing o, r, k

  • corkage — a charge made at a restaurant for serving wine, etc, bought off the premises
  • corkers — Plural form of corker.
  • corking — excellent
  • cormack — Allan (MacLeod)1924-98; U.S. physicist, born in South Africa
  • croaked — Simple past tense and past participle of croak.
  • croaker — an animal, bird, etc, that croaks
  • crocked — injured
  • crocker — A potter.
  • crocket — a carved ornament in the form of a curled leaf or cusp, used in Gothic architecture
  • crooked — If you describe something as crooked, especially something that is usually straight, you mean that it is bent or twisted.
  • crooker — sick or feeble.
  • crookes — Sir William. 1832–1919, English chemist and physicist: he investigated the properties of cathode rays and invented a type of radiometer and the lens named after him
  • cutwork — openwork embroidery in which the pattern is cut away from the background
  • daywork — a form of work that is calculated and paid for on a daily basis
  • defrock — If a priest is defrocked, he is forced to stop being a priest because of bad behaviour.
  • dockers — Plural form of docker.
  • dorhawk — nightjar
  • dorkier — stupid, inept, or unfashionable.
  • dorking — one of an English breed of chicken, having five toes on each foot instead of the usual four.
  • dorkish — stupid or contemptible
  • dornick — a small stone that is easy to throw.
  • doucker — (UK, dialect) A grebe or diver.
  • droshky — A low four-wheeled open carriage of a kind formerly used in Russia.
  • droukit — drenched; soaked
  • drydock — (nautical) A dock that can be drained of water and is used in the repair and construction of ships.
  • dvornik — a Russian doorkeeper, caretaker, or groundsman
  • earlock — a lock of hair worn near or in front of the ear.
  • einkorn — A form of wheat, Triticum monococcum, having a single grain.
  • elkhorn — The horn of an elk.
  • eurisko — (artificial intelligence)   A language for "opportunistic programming" written by Doug Lenat in 1978. Eurisko constructs its own methods and modifies its strategies as it tries to solve a problem.
  • folkers — Plural form of folker.
  • forakerMount, a mountain in central Alaska, in the Alaska Range, near Mt. McKinley. 17,280 feet (5267 meters).
  • forkful — the amount a fork can hold.
  • forking — an instrument having two or more prongs or tines, for holding, lifting, etc., as an implement for handling food or any of various agricultural tools.
  • forsake — to quit or leave entirely; abandon; desert: She has forsaken her country for an island in the South Pacific.
  • forseek — (transitive) To seek thoroughly (for); seek out.
  • forsook — a simple past tense of forsake.
  • frocked — Simple past tense and past participle of frock.
  • frohawk — A Mohawk hairstyle worn by someone with afro-textured hair, with the crest generally standing up naturally.
  • frolick — Archaic form of frolic.
  • futhork — The Old English runic alphabet.
  • genroku — a period of Japanese cultural history, c1675–1725, characterized by depiction of everyday secular activities of urban dwellers in fiction and woodblock prints.
  • geopark — A UNESCO-designated area containing one or more sites of particular geological importance, intended to conserve the geological heritage and promote public awareness of it, typically through tourism.
  • go dark — (of a company) to remove itself from the register of major exchanges while continuing to trade
  • go-kart — kart.
  • gorcock — the male of the red grouse
  • górecki — Henryk (Mikołaj). 1933–2010, Polish composer, best known for his sombre third symphony (1979)
  • grockle — (slang, British, various parts of the South West) A tourist from elsewhere in the country.
  • grokked — Simple past tense and past participle of grok.
  • gromyko — Andrei Andreevich [uhn-dryey uhn-drye-yi-vyich] /ʌnˈdryeɪ ʌnˈdryɛ yɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1909–89, Soviet diplomat: foreign minister 1957–85, president 1985–88.
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