6-letter words containing r, a, k
- cracks — to break without complete separation of parts; become fissured: The plate cracked when I dropped it, but it was still usable.
- crackt — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of crack.
- cracky — full of cracks
- craker — (obsolete) One who boasts; a braggart.
- crakow — poulaine.
- cranko — John. 1927–73, British choreographer, born in South Africa: director of the Stuttgart Ballet (1961–73)
- cranks — Plural form of crank.
- cranky — If you describe ideas or ways of behaving as cranky, you disapprove of them because you think they are strange.
- creaks — to make a sharp, harsh, grating, or squeaking sound.
- creaky — A creaky object creaks when it moves.
- croaks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of croak.
- croaky — If someone's voice is croaky, it is low and rough.
- d-mark — deutsche mark
- dacker — to walk slowly; to saunter
- daiker — dacker.
- danker — Comparative form of dank.
- darked — having very little or no light: a dark room.
- darken — If something darkens or if a person or thing darkens it, it becomes darker.
- darker — having very little or no light: a dark room.
- darkey — (slang, offensive, ethnic slur) A person with dark skin.
- darkie — darky.
- darkle — to grow dark; darken
- darkly — so as to appear dark.
- debark — to remove the bark from (a tree)
- demark — to remove all trace of (a person or thing)
- dharuk — an Australian aboriginal language, now extinct, spoken in the area of the first European settlement at Port Jackson.
- drakes — Plural form of drake.
- durkan — (John) Mark. born 1960, Northern Irish politician; leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) from 2001 to 2010
- dvorak — Antonín [ahn-taw-nyeen] /ˈɑn tɔ nyin/ (Show IPA), 1841–1904, Czech composer.
- eirack — a young hen in its first year
- embark — Go on board a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle.
- empark — Obsolete form of impark.
- enrank — to put in a row or rank
- eureka — A cry of joy or satisfaction when one finds or discovers something.
- fakeer — An Eastern religious ascetic or monk.
- fakers — Plural form of faker.
- fakery — the practice or result of faking.
- fakirs — Plural form of fakir.
- flaker — a small, flat, thin piece, especially one that has been or become detached from a larger piece or mass: flakes of old paint.
- frakel — (obsolete) Fraked.
- franck — César (Auguste) [sey-zar oh-gyst] /seɪˈzar oʊˈgüst/ (Show IPA), 1822–90, French composer, born in Belgium.
- franko — Ivan [ee-vahn] /iˈvɑn/ (Show IPA), 1856–1916, Ukrainian writer.
- franks — Plural form of frank.
- franky — a male given name, form of Frank.
- freaks — Plural form of freak.
- freaky — freakish.
- friska — a fast section in the music of a Hungarian folk dance or in a piece of music of this style
- gawker — Someone who gawks, someone who stares stupidly.
- gurkha — a member of a Rajput people, Hindu in religion, who achieved dominion over Nepal in the 18th century.
- hacker — a person, as an artist or writer, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and mediocre work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts: As a painter, he was little more than a hack.