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10-letter words containing o, s, k, e

  • slovenlike — slovenly
  • smoke bomb — a bomb that produces a continuous discharge of smoke rather than an explosion, used to mark a target for aerial attack, indicate wind direction, produce a smoke screen, etc.
  • smoke dome — the smoke chamber covering of a prefabricated metal fireplace unit.
  • smoke ring — a visible ring formed by the sudden release of smoke, usually created by blowing smoke from the mouth or by a cigarette, incense stick etc
  • smoke shop — a shop selling tobacco products.
  • smoke tree — Also called American smoke tree, chittamwood. a tree, Cotinus obovatus, of the cashew family, native to the southeastern U.S., having egg-shaped leaves and large clusters of small white flowers.
  • smoke-free — without any smoke from cigarettes, etc
  • smokeboard — a board situated above a fireplace to prevent the emission of smoke into a room
  • smoked out — the visible vapor and gases given off by a burning or smoldering substance, especially the gray, brown, or blackish mixture of gases and suspended carbon particles resulting from the combustion of wood, peat, coal, or other organic matter.
  • smokehouse — a building or place in which meat, fish, etc., are cured with smoke.
  • smokeproof — that cannot be penetrated by smoke: a fireproof and smokeproof compartment.
  • smokestack — Also called stack. a pipe for the escape of the smoke or gases of combustion, as on a steamboat, locomotive, or building.
  • smoketight — (of a door, etc) not allowing smoke to pass through
  • snake foot — an elongated foot or short leg, as to a pedestal table, having the form of an ogee tangent to the floor surface.
  • snakemouth — rose pogonia.
  • snakestone — a piece of porous material popularly supposed to neutralize the toxic effect of a snakebite.
  • snorkeling — Also called, British, snort. a device permitting a submarine to remain submerged for prolonged periods, consisting of tubes extended above the surface of the water to take in air for the diesel engine and for general ventilation and to discharge exhaust gases and foul air.
  • snorkeller — a person who uses a snorkel or goes snorkelling
  • soapflakes — small particles of solid soap or detergent used for washing clothes
  • sock-liner — a thin piece of material, as leather, that is laid on top of the insole of a shoe, boot, or other footwear.
  • socket 370 — (hardware, standard, processor)   (PGA370) A physical and electrical specification for a motherboard processor socket. Socket 370 uses a square SPGA ZIF socket with 370 pins, arranged 37x37 (sometimes described as 19x19). The difference between the two versions is electrical; some pins are used differently and voltage requirements have been changed from Intel's VRM 8.2 to VRM 8.4. In addition, Celeron processors require a 66 MHz front side bus (FSB), and Pentium III processors require a 100/133 MHz FSB. Some older Socket 370 motherboards support VRM 8.4 and variable bus speeds, so adapters are available that convert the socket pinout to allow FC-PGA processors to work.
  • socket set — a set of different sized tools that can fit onto one handle and are used to tighten and loosen nuts
  • soundalike — a person or thing that sounds like another, especially a better known or more famous prototype: a whole spate of Elvis Presley soundalikes.
  • sourcebook — a book which contains sources of information on a particular subject
  • spiderwork — a thing which has the appearance of a spider's web
  • spike moss — any of numerous plants of the genus Selaginella, allied to and resembling the club mosses.
  • spoken for — engaged, reserved, or allocated
  • spokeshave — a cutting tool having a blade set between two handles, originally for shaping spokes, but now in general use for dressing curved edges of wood and forming round bars and shapes.
  • spongecake — sweet cake of eggs and flour
  • spookiness — like or befitting a spook or ghost; suggestive of spooks.
  • spot check — impromptu inspection
  • spot-check — to examine or investigate by means of a spot check.
  • stake boat — an anchored boat to which barges or other boats are temporarily moored.
  • stake body — an open truck body having a platform with sockets at the edge into which upright stakes may be placed to form a fence around a load.
  • steakhouse — a restaurant specializing in beefsteak.
  • steelworks — an establishment where steel is made and often manufactured into girders, rails, etc.
  • sternworks — the rear of a vessel
  • stinkstone — any of various limestones that emit an unpleasant odor when scratched or struck.
  • stock code — an abbreviation that identifies a particular security on a stock-quotation machine
  • stock cube — bouillon cube used for gravy, etc.
  • stock dove — a cosmopolitan wild pigeon, Columba oenas, of Europe.
  • stockhorse — a horse or pony used in herding cattle.
  • 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
  • stockowner — stockholder (def 1).
  • stockrider — a cowboy.
  • stockroute — a public trail having right of way across private properties and over which cattle and sheep may be herded to grazing grounds or to market.
  • stoke-hold — Also, stokehold [stohk-hohld] /ˈstoʊkˌhoʊld/ (Show IPA). fireroom.
  • stonebreak — any of a variety of plants in the genus Saxifraga
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