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6-letter words containing s, k

  • stocky — of solid and sturdy form or build; thick-set and, usually, short.
  • stoked — exhilarated; excited.
  • stokerBram [bram] /bræm/ (Show IPA), (Abraham Stoker) 1847–1912, British novelist, born in Ireland: creator of Dracula.
  • stokes — a unit of kinematic viscosity, equal to the viscosity of a fluid in poises divided by the density of the fluid in grams per cubic centimeter.
  • strake — Nautical. a continuous course of planks or plates on a ship forming a hull shell, deck, etc.
  • streak — a long, narrow mark, smear, band of color, or the like: streaks of mud.
  • streek — to stretch (one's limbs), as on awakening or by exercise.
  • strick — a group of any of the major bast fibers, as flax or jute, prepared for conversion into sliver form.
  • strike — to deal a blow or stroke to (a person or thing), as with the fist, a weapon, or a hammer; hit.
  • stroke — a short oblique stroke (/) between two words indicating that whichever is appropriate may be chosen to complete the sense of the text in which they occur: The defendant and his/her attorney must appear in court.
  • strook — a simple past tense and past participle of strike.
  • struck — simple past tense and a past participle of strike.
  • suakin — a port in the NE Sudan, on the Red Sea: formerly the chief port of the African Red Sea; now obstructed by a coral reef. Pop: reliable recent estimates are not available
  • sucken — a piece of land from which the crops must be ground at a specific mill
  • sucker — a person or thing that sucks.
  • suckle — to nurse at the breast or udder.
  • sudoku — a puzzle printed on a square grid of nine large squares each subdivided into nine smaller squares, the object of which is to fill in each of the 81 squares so that each column, row, and large square contains every number from 1 to 9.
  • sukkah — a booth or hut roofed with branches, built against or near a house or synagogue and used during the Jewish festival of Sukkoth as a temporary dining or living area.
  • sukkot — a booth or hut roofed with branches, built against or near a house or synagogue and used during the Jewish festival of Sukkoth as a temporary dining or living area.
  • sukkur — a city in SE Pakistan, on the Indus River.
  • sukuma — a member of an agricultural people of northwestern Tanzania, near Lake Victoria, who constitute the country's largest population group.
  • sulked — to remain silent or hold oneself aloof in a sullen, ill-humored, or offended mood: Promise me that you won't sulk if I want to leave the party early.
  • sulker — to remain silent or hold oneself aloof in a sullen, ill-humored, or offended mood: Promise me that you won't sulk if I want to leave the party early.
  • sunken — having sunk or been sunk beneath the surface; submerged.
  • sunket — something, especially something to eat.
  • sunkie — a little stool
  • suslik — a common ground squirrel or spermophile, Spermophilus (Citellus) citellus, of Europe and Asia.
  • swanky — elegant or ostentatious; swank.
  • syskey — (cryptography, operating system, security)   A utility that encrpyts the hashed password information in a SAM database using a 128-bit encryption key. SYSKEY was an optional feature added in Windows NT 4.0 SP3. It was meant to protect against offline password cracking attacks so that the SAM database would still be secure even if someone had a copy of it. However, in December 1999, a security team from BindView found a security hole in SYSKEY which indicates that a certain form of cryptoanalytic attack is possible offline. A brute-force attack then appeared to be possible. Microsoft later collaborated with BindView to issue a fix (dubbed the 'Syskey Bug') which appears to have been settled and SYSKEY pronounced secure enough to resist brute-force attack. According to Todd Sabin of the BindView team RAZOR, the pre-RC3 versions of Windows 2000 were also affected.
  • tarskiAlfred, 1902–1983, U.S. mathematician and logician, born in Poland.
  • tasked — a definite piece of work assigned to, falling to, or expected of a person; duty.
  • tasker — a definite piece of work assigned to, falling to, or expected of a person; duty.
  • thanks — to express gratitude, appreciation, or acknowledgment to: She thanked them for their hospitality.
  • thicks — having relatively great extent from one surface or side to the opposite; not thin: a thick slice.
  • tisick — a splutter; a cough
  • toklasAlice B. 1877–1967, U.S. author in France: friend and companion of Gertrude Stein.
  • 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.
  • tranks — the piece of leather from which one glove is cut.
  • tricks — a crafty or underhanded device, maneuver, stratagem, or the like, intended to deceive or cheat; artifice; ruse; wile.
  • trunks — the main stem of a tree, as distinct from the branches and roots.
  • tsking — an exclamation of “tsk.”.
  • tsktsk — an exclamation of “tsk.”.
  • tuskar — (in Orkney and Shetland) a peat-cutting spade
  • tusked — (in certain animals) a tooth developed to great length, usually one of a pair, as in the elephant, walrus, and wild boar, but singly in the narwhal.
  • tusker — an animal with tusks, as an elephant or a wild boar.
  • tykish — of, relating to, or characteristic of a tyke
  • uckers — a board game similar to ludo, played by people in the navy
  • unhusk — to free from or as if from a husk.
  • unkiss — to cancel (a previous kiss or a particular action) with a kiss
  • unmask — to strip a mask or disguise from.
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