7-letter words containing p, e, k
- pickaxe — a pick, especially a mattock.
- pickeer — to engage in skirmishes in advance of troops of an army.
- pickens — Andrew, 1739–1817, American Revolutionary general.
- pickery — petty theft
- pickett — Bill, 1871–1932, U.S. rodeo performer: famed as bulldogger.
- pickled — preserved or steeped in brine or other liquid.
- pickney — a child
- piglike — like or reminiscent of a pig
- pikeman — a soldier armed with a pike.
- pinkeye — a contagious, epidemic form of acute conjunctivitis occurring in humans and certain animals: so called from the color of the inflamed eye.
- pinkies — inferior or cheap wine, especially red wine.
- pishpek — former name (until 1926) of Bishkek.
- placket — the opening or slit at the top of a skirt, or in a dress or blouse, that facilitates putting it on and taking it off.
- plinker — a person who shoots a handgun recreationally
- pliskie — a practical joke
- plonker — idiot, foolish person
- plucked — to pull off or out from the place of growth, as fruit, flowers, feathers, etc.: to pluck feathers from a chicken.
- plucker — to pull off or out from the place of growth, as fruit, flowers, feathers, etc.: to pluck feathers from a chicken.
- plunker — a person or thing that plunks.
- plunket — Saint Oliver. 1629–81, Irish Roman Catholic churchman and martyr; wrongly executed as a supposed conspirator in the Popish Plot (1678). Feast day: July 11
- pockies — woollen mittens
- podlike — resembling a pod
- pokable — to prod or push, especially with something narrow or pointed, as a finger, elbow, stick, etc.: to poke someone in the ribs.
- poke at — If you poke at something, you make lots of little pushing movements at it with a sharp object.
- pokeful — the contents of a small bag
- porkpie — a snap-brimmed hat with a round, flat crown, usually made of felt.
- potlike — resembling a pot, shaped like a pot
- pranked — to dress or adorn in an ostentatious manner: They were all pranked out in their fanciest clothes.
- prebake — to bake in advance or beforehand
- prebook — a handwritten or printed work of fiction or nonfiction, usually on sheets of paper fastened or bound together within covers.
- precook — to cook (food) partly or completely beforehand, so that it may be cooked or warmed and served quickly at a later time.
- predusk — the period before dusk
- prepack — a package assembled by a manufacturer, distributor, or retailer and containing a specific number of items or a specific assortment of sizes, colors, flavors, etc., of a product.
- prerock — of the era before rock music
- presoak — to soak (laundry) in a liquid containing agents that loosen dirt, remove stains, etc., before washing.
- prework — exertion or effort directed to produce or accomplish something; labor; toil.
- pricker — a puncture made by a needle, thorn, or the like.
- pricket — a sharp metal point on which to stick a candle.
- prickle — a sharp point.
- pronuke — pronuclear1 .
- provoke — to anger, enrage, exasperate, or vex.
- psykter — a wine jar with an ovoid body tapering at the neck, set on a high foot: used for cooling wine.
- puckery — puckered.
- pukatea — an aromatic New Zealand tree, Laurelia novae-zealandiae, valued for its high-quality timber
- puslike — a yellow-white, more or less viscid substance produced by suppuration and found in abscesses, sores, etc., consisting of a liquid plasma in which white blood cells are suspended.
- rake up — an agricultural implement with teeth or tines for gathering cut grass, hay, or the like or for smoothing the surface of the ground.
- rampike — a dead tree, especially the bleached skeleton or splintered trunk of a tree killed by fire, lightning, or wind.
- respeak — to speak or say (something) again
- ryepeck — a pole used in mooring a punt
- seppuku — hara-kiri (def 1).