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9-letter words containing s, k, a, n, e

  • handshake — handshaking
  • handspike — a bar used as a lever.
  • hankerers — Plural form of hankerer.
  • heartsink — a patient who repeatedly visits his or her doctor's surgery, often with multiple or non-specific symptoms, and whose complaints are impossible to treat
  • heat sink — Thermodynamics. any environment or medium that absorbs heat.
  • in-basket — in-box.
  • intertask — Between tasks.
  • iseikonia — a condition in which a person sees the same image in both eyes
  • jacksnipe — Also called half snipe. a small, short-billed snipe, Limnocryptes minimus, of Europe and Asia.
  • jackstone — jack1 (def 5a, b).
  • jawlensky — Alexej von [ah-le-ksey fuh n] /ˌɑ lɛˈkseɪ fən/ (Show IPA), 1864?–1941, German painter, born in Russia.
  • kahn test — a test for syphilis based on the formation of a precipitate in a mixture of serum and antigen.
  • kakemonos — (uncommon) Plural form of kakemono.
  • kalsomine — to wash or cover with calcimine.
  • katangese — a native or inhabitant of Katanga.
  • keansburg — a town in E New Jersey.
  • keynesian — of or relating to the economic theories, doctrines, or policies of Keynes or his followers, especially the policy of maintaining high employment and controlling inflation by varying the interest rates, tax rates, and public expenditure.
  • khamaseen — A cyclonic type wind that is common in Egypt and Sudan towards the end of March and April of each year. Hot weather ensues, as well as sandstorms.
  • kidnapers — Plural form of kidnaper.
  • kingsnake — Any of various colubrid snake of the genus Lampropeltis.
  • knapweeds — Plural form of knapweed.
  • knaveship — a small proportion of milled grain that was due to the person who did the milling
  • kusimanse — (zoology) Several species of dwarf mongoose in genus Crossarchus.
  • lankesterSir Edwin Ray, 1847–1929, English zoologist and writer.
  • lankiness — The state or condition of being lanky.
  • larkiness — the quality or characteristic of being larky
  • leakiness — The property of being leaky.
  • lunkheads — Plural form of lunkhead.
  • mackensen — August von [ou-goo st fuh n] /ˈaʊ gʊst fən/ (Show IPA), 1849–1945, German field marshal.
  • make news — to do something that is apt to be reported as news
  • mandrakes — a narcotic, short-stemmed European plant, Mandragora officinarum, of the nightshade family, having a fleshy, often forked root somewhat resembling a human form.
  • masakhane — a political slogan of solidarity
  • monk seal — a small, dark brown, subtropical seal of the genus Monachus: the three species, M. tropicalis of the Caribbean, M. schauinslandi of Hawaiian island regions, and M. monachus of the Mediterranean, are endangered.
  • mud snake — an iridescent black and red snake, Farancia abacura, of southeastern and south-central U.S., having a sharp, stiff tail tip used in manipulating prey into position for swallowing.
  • muskogean — a family of American Indian languages of the southeastern U.S., including Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and several less well-known languages.
  • nakedness — The state or fact of being naked.
  • namesakes — Plural form of namesake.
  • nebraskan — of or relating to Nebraska.
  • neckbands — Plural form of neckband.
  • necklaces — Plural form of necklace.
  • newsbreak — a newsworthy event or incident.
  • newsmaker — a person, thing, or event that is newsworthy: a weekly magazine devoted to stories on newsmakers.
  • newsqueak — A concurrent applicative language with synchronous channels.
  • nicknames — Plural form of nickname.
  • ninebarks — Plural form of ninebark.
  • nonskater — a person who does not skate
  • nukespeak — Informal. euphemistic language and obscuring jargon used in discussions of nuclear weapons, nuclear power, etc.: nukespeak that minimizes the risks of nuclear war.
  • oakenshaw — an area of woodland containing oak trees
  • pasternak — Boris Leonidovich [bawr-is,, bohr-,, bor-;; Russian buh-ryees lyi-uh-nyee-duh-vyich] /ˈbɔr ɪs,, ˈboʊr-,, ˈbɒr-;; Russian bʌˈryis lyɪ ʌˈnyi də vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1890–1960, Russian poet, novelist, and translator: declined 1958 Nobel prize.
  • peakiness — peaked2 .
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