10-letter words containing s, t, e, a, k
- leafstalks — Plural form of leafstalk.
- leukoblast — an immature leukocyte.
- lockmaster — one in charge of a canal lock
- lose track — a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
- make haste — swiftness of motion; speed; celerity: He performed his task with great haste. They felt the need for haste.
- make shift — to manage or do the best one can (with whatever means are at hand)
- makeshifts — Plural form of makeshift.
- marketeers — Plural form of marketeer.
- marketings — Plural form of marketing.
- master key — a key that will open a number of different locks, the proper keys of which are not interchangeable.
- masterwork — masterpiece.
- matsu-take — an edible fungus, Armillaria matsutake, of Japan.
- matsutakes — Plural form of matsutake.
- meat hooks — the hands or fists
- metalworks — Plural form of metalwork.
- mistakable — capable of being or liable to be mistaken or misunderstood.
- mistakenly — wrongly conceived, held, or done: a mistaken antagonism.
- mythmakers — Plural form of mythmaker.
- oak forest — a town in NE Illinois.
- open-stack — having or being a system of library management in which patrons have direct access to stacks for browsing and selecting books; open-shelf.
- out-basket — out-box.
- outsparkle — to sparkle more brilliantly than
- painstaker — a painstaking person
- postmarked — an official mark stamped on letters and other mail, serving as a cancellation of the postage stamp and indicating the place, date, and sometimes time of sending or receipt.
- racetracks — Plural form of racetrack.
- ratskeller — the cellar of a town hall, esp one used as a beer hall or restaurant
- rickettsia — any member of the genus Rickettsia, comprising rod-shaped to coccoid microorganisms that resemble bacteria but can be as small as a large virus and reproduce only inside a living cell, parasitic in fleas, ticks, lice, and mites and transmitted by bite to vertebrate hosts, including humans, causing such severe diseases as typhus and Rocky Mountain spotted fever.
- rump steak — Rump or rump steak is meat cut from the rear end of a cow.
- saint luke — a fellow worker of Paul and a physician (Colossians 4:14). Feast day: Oct 18
- sales talk — a line of reasoning or argument intended to persuade someone to buy, accept, or do something.
- salt shake — a salt shaker.
- saltshaker — table-salt dispenser
- samarskite — a velvet-black mineral, a complex columbate-tantalate of uranium, cerium, etc., occurring in masses: a minor source of uranium, thorium, and rare-earth oxides.
- sauerkraut — cabbage cut fine, salted, and allowed to ferment until sour.
- scent-mark — to deposit a scent mark; mark.
- sea rocket — any of several plants of the related genus Cakile, esp C. maritima, which grow along the seashores of Europe and North America and have mauve, pink, or white flowers
- shackleton — Sir Ernest Henry, 1874–1922, English explorer of the Antarctic.
- sheeptrack — a small natural terrace on a hillside
- shirtmaker — a person who makes shirts.
- skaithless — without injury or damage
- skate over — to cross on or as if on skates
- skate park — area for skateboarding
- skateboard — a device for riding upon, usually while standing, consisting of a short, oblong piece of wood, plastic, or aluminum mounted on large roller-skate wheels, used on smooth surfaces and requiring better balance of the rider than the ordinary roller skate does.
- sketch map — a rough map of the principal features of a locale, as one drawn from memory.
- sketchable — suitable for being sketched.
- smokestack — Also called stack. a pipe for the escape of the smoke or gases of combustion, as on a steamboat, locomotive, or building.
- snail kite — a bird of prey, Rostrhamus sociabilis, that travels in flocks in the American tropics and feeds on snails.
- snake foot — an elongated foot or short leg, as to a pedestal table, having the form of an ogee tangent to the floor surface.
- snakemouth — rose pogonia.
- snakestone — a piece of porous material popularly supposed to neutralize the toxic effect of a snakebite.