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7-letter words containing r, a, k

  • outbark — to bark more than or louder than
  • outrank — to have a higher rank than: A major outranks a captain in the army.
  • packrat — Also called trade rat, wood rat. a large, bushy-tailed rodent, Neotoma cinerea, of North America, noted for carrying off small articles to store in its nest.
  • palikar — a Greek militiaman in the Greek war for independence against the Turks 1821–28.
  • palikir — the capital of the Federated States of Micronesia, on the island of Pohnpei.
  • paprika — a red, powdery condiment derived from dried, ripe sweet peppers.
  • parakou — a city in E central Benin.
  • parbake — to partially bake
  • parkade — a building or other construction designed for the parking of motor vehicles.
  • parking — an area of land, usually in a largely natural state, for the enjoyment of the public, having facilities for rest and recreation, often owned, set apart, and managed by a city, state, or nation.
  • parkish — like or similar to a park
  • parkmanFrancis, 1823–93, U.S. historian.
  • parkour — the sport of moving along a route, typically in a city, trying to get around or through various obstacles in the quickest and most efficient manner possible, as by jumping, climbing, or running: his amazing parkour skills.
  • parkway — a broad thoroughfare with a dividing strip or side strips planted with grass, trees, etc.
  • parrock — a small field or enclosure; a pen
  • partake — to take or have a part or share along with others; participate (usually followed by in): He won't partake in the victory celebration.
  • partook — simple past tense of partake.
  • patrickSaint, a.d. 389?–461? British missionary and bishop in Ireland: patron saint of Ireland.
  • pazyryk — the site of 40 wood-lined pit tombs c500–c300 b.c. in the Altai Mountains of central Asia, containing the tattooed bodies of nomadic chieftains of the eastern Steppes and grave goods all well-preserved in a frozen state.
  • phacker — (communications, security)   A telephone system cracker. A phacker may attempt to gain unauthorised access to a phone system in order to make free or untraceable calls or he may disrupt, alter or illegally tap phone systems via computer. The disruptions may include causing a phone line to be engaged so no calls go in or out, redirecting outgoing or incoming calls, as well as listening to actual calls made. Phackers are frequently confidence tricksters or phone freaks (nuisance callers who can only relate to other people by phone). Phackers are sometimes employed by illegal enterprises to conduct business using untraceable calls, or to disrupt, or follow legal authorities' investigations. Phackers interventions may be lethal to the person being phacked. A phacker may be a phone company employee, or usually, ex-employee who specialises in illegal phone system disruption, alteration or tapping via physically altering installations. A phacker is generally considered to be a socially and intellectually retarded cracker. See Captain Crunch.
  • prakrit — any of the vernacular Indic languages of the ancient and medieval periods, as distinguished from Sanskrit.
  • 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
  • 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.
  • presoak — to soak (laundry) in a liquid containing agents that loosen dirt, remove stains, etc., before washing.
  • protalk — Quintus. An object-oriented Prolog.
  • pugmark — pug4 (def 1).
  • quacker — a fraudulent or ignorant pretender to medical skill.
  • rack up — ruin or destruction; wrack.
  • rackers — Plural form of racker.
  • rackets — a light bat having a netting of catgut or nylon stretched in a more or less oval frame and used for striking the ball in tennis, the shuttlecock in badminton, etc.
  • rackett — ranket.
  • rackety — making or causing a racket; noisy.
  • rackful — Enough to fill a rack.
  • rackhamArthur, 1867–1939, English illustrator and painter.
  • racking — Also called cloud rack. a group of drifting clouds.
  • ragwork — masonry of thin, undressed rubble.
  • rake in — an agricultural implement with teeth or tines for gathering cut grass, hay, or the like or for smoothing the surface of the ground.
  • 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.
  • ramekin — a small dish in which food can be baked and served.
  • rampike — a dead tree, especially the bleached skeleton or splintered trunk of a tree killed by fire, lightning, or wind.
  • rankest — growing with excessive luxuriance; vigorous and tall of growth: tall rank weeds.
  • rankine — William John Macquorn [muh-kwawrn] /məˈkwɔrn/ (Show IPA), 1820–70, Scottish engineer and physicist.
  • ranking — senior or superior in rank, position, etc.: a ranking diplomat.
  • rankish — growing with excessive luxuriance; vigorous and tall of growth: tall rank weeds.
  • rankism — discrimination against people on the grounds of rank
  • rankist — involving or showing discrimination against people on the grounds of rank
  • rankled — (of unpleasant feelings, experiences, etc.) to continue to cause keen irritation or bitter resentment within the mind; fester; be painful.
  • rankles — (of unpleasant feelings, experiences, etc.) to continue to cause keen irritation or bitter resentment within the mind; fester; be painful.
  • ransack — to search thoroughly or vigorously through (a house, receptacle, etc.): They ransacked the house for the missing letter.
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