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7-letter words containing s, i, k

  • desking — the desks and related furnishings in a given space, such as an office
  • dickens — Charles (John Huffam), pen name Boz. 1812–70, English novelist, famous for the humour and sympathy of his characterization and his criticism of social injustice. His major works include The Pickwick Papers (1837), Oliver Twist (1839), Nicholas Nickleby (1839), Old Curiosity Shop (1840–41), Martin Chuzzlewit (1844), David Copperfield (1850), Bleak House (1853), Little Dorrit (1857), and Great Expectations (1861)
  • dickers — Plural form of dicker.
  • dickeys — Plural form of dickey.
  • dickish — (US, colloquial, coarse, pejorative) Offensively unpleasant and vexatious.
  • dicksonLeonard Eugene, 1874–1954, U.S. mathematician.
  • diktats — Plural form of diktat.
  • dirksenEverett McKinley, 1896–1969, U.S. politician.
  • disbark — (transitive) To strip of bark.
  • disking — a phonograph record.
  • dislike — to regard with displeasure, antipathy, or aversion: I dislike working. I dislike oysters.
  • dislink — to disunite
  • dismask — to remove the mask from
  • dispark — to release from confinement
  • disrank — to deprive (oneself or another) of rank, to demote
  • disyoke — to free from or as from a yoke.
  • doeskin — the skin of a doe.
  • dogskin — Leather made of or imitating dog's skin, especially as used for gloves.
  • dorkish — stupid or contemptible
  • duckies — Plural form of duckie.
  • duikers — Plural form of duiker.
  • dukakisMichael, born 1933, U.S. politician: governor of Massachusetts 1983–90.
  • duskier — Comparative form of dusky.
  • duskily — In a dusky manner.
  • dusking — Present participle of dusk.
  • duskish — Somewhat dusky.
  • eelskin — The skin of a hagfish.
  • erskine — Thomas, 1st Baron. 1750–1823, Scottish lawyer: noted as a defence advocate, esp in cases involving civil liberties
  • eurisko — (artificial intelligence)   A language for "opportunistic programming" written by Doug Lenat in 1978. Eurisko constructs its own methods and modifies its strategies as it tries to solve a problem.
  • falk is — Falkland Islands
  • firkins — Plural form of firkin.
  • flakies — dandruff
  • folkies — Plural form of folkie.
  • folkish — of or resembling the common people: folkish crafts.
  • fosdickHarry Emerson, 1878–1969, U.S. preacher and author.
  • fossick — Mining. to undermine another's digging; search for waste gold in relinquished workings, washing places, etc.
  • foxskin — the skin of a fox
  • frisked — Simple past tense and past participle of frisk.
  • frisker — One who frisks or dances.
  • frisket — a mask of thin paper laid over an illustration to shield certain areas when using an airbrush.
  • gaskins — Plural form of gaskin.
  • gawkish — awkward; ungainly; clumsy.
  • geekish — Like a geek; having the traits of a geek.
  • geekism — a preoccupation with subjects that are generally considered as unfashionable or boring
  • griskin — a chop or steak, especially a pork chop.
  • hackies — Plural form of hackie.
  • hackish — (jargon)   /hak'ish/ 1. Said of something that is or involves a hack. 2. Of or pertaining to hackers or the hacker subculture. See also true-hacker.
  • hankies — Plural form of hanky.
  • harkinsWilliam Draper, 1873–1951, U.S. chemist.
  • hawkinsSir Anthony Hope ("Anthony Hope") 1863–1933, English novelist and playwright.
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