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11-letter words containing r, a, k, e

  • leatherwork — work or decoration done in leather.
  • lemon shark — a common shallow-water shark, Negaprion brevirostris, having a yellowish body and inhabiting inshore regions of the Atlantic from North Carolina to Brazil.
  • length mark — a symbol indicating the length of a vowel sound
  • leopardskin — the skin of a leopard
  • leukorrheal — Relating to leukorrhea.
  • liederkranz — a German choral society or singing club, especially of men.
  • like a bird — without resistance or difficulty
  • linebackers — Plural form of linebacker.
  • link loader — linker
  • little sark — one of the Channel Islands, in the English Channel E of Guernsey, connected to Sark by a natural causeway.
  • lobsterback — redcoat.
  • lock washer — a washer placed under a nut on a bolt or screw, so made as to prevent the nut from shaking loose.
  • loudspeaker — any of various devices, usually electronic, by which speech, music, etc., can be intensified and made audible throughout a room, hall, or the like.
  • lower lakes — Lakes Erie and Ontario
  • lucky break — a fortunate and unexpected turn of events
  • lukewarmish — fairly or somewhat lukewarm
  • lumberjacks — Plural form of lumberjack.
  • lunch break — pause for midday meal
  • madder lake — a strong purple-red color.
  • maeterlinck — Comte Maurice [French moh-rees] /French moʊˈris/ (Show IPA), 1862–1947, Belgian poet, dramatist, and essayist: Nobel prize 1911.
  • magpie lark — a black-and-white pied bird, Grallina cyanoleuca, inhabiting areas near water in Australia and southern New Guinea.
  • main market — the market for trading in the listed securities of companies on the London Stock Exchange
  • makassarese — a member of a Muslim people of southwestern Sulawesi, near Ujung Pandang, closely related to the Buginese.
  • make rounds — having a flat, circular surface, as a disk.
  • make tracks — a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
  • make up for — compensate
  • mantle rock — the layer of disintegrated and decomposed rock fragments, including soil, just above the solid rock of the earth's crust; regolith.
  • mantuamaker — A maker of women's clothes, especially dresses.
  • marble cake — a cake given a streaked, marblelike appearance by the incomplete mixing of dark, especially chocolate, and light batters.
  • march break — a school holiday, usually for a week, during March
  • marker buoy — a buoy used to distinguish or mark something
  • market boat — a boat that transfers fish from a fishing fleet to a market on shore.
  • market data — Market data is information gathered about the demand for goods, such as the number of units sold, and the value of goods sold.
  • market rent — (in Britain) the rent chargeable for accommodation, allowing for the scarcity of that kind of property and the willingness of tenants to pay
  • market test — If a company carries out a market test, it asks a group of people to try a new product or service and give their opinions on it.
  • market town — a town where a regularly scheduled market is held.
  • marketplace — an open area in a town where a market is held.
  • marking pen — marker (def 10).
  • marksperson — A marksman or markswoman.
  • marlinspike — a pointed iron implement used in separating the strands of rope in splicing, marling, etc.
  • mary leakey — Louis Seymour Bazett [baz-it] /ˈbæz ɪt/ (Show IPA), 1903–72, British archaeologist and anthropologist.
  • mass market — general public
  • mass-market — (of products) produced and distributed in large quantities and intended to appeal to the widest range of consumers.
  • master disk — an original disk from which duplicates are made
  • master-work — masterpiece.
  • masterworks — Plural form of masterwork.
  • matchmakers — Plural form of matchmaker.
  • meadowlarks — Plural form of meadowlark.
  • meat market — a market where meat is sold
  • mekhitarist — a member of an order of Armenian monks founded in Constantinople in the 18th century and following the rule of St. Benedict.
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