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8-letter words containing t, i, c, k

  • pigstick — to hunt for wild boar, usually on horseback and using a spear.
  • pin tuck — a narrow ornamental fold used esp on shirt fronts and dress bodices
  • politick — to engage in politicking.
  • puckfist — a puffball fungus
  • quickest — done, proceeding, or occurring with promptness or rapidity, as an action, process, etc.; prompt; immediate: a quick response.
  • quickset — a plant or cutting, especially of hawthorn, set to grow, as in a hedge.
  • sick-out — a form of industrial action in which all workers in a factory, etc, report sick simultaneously
  • sit back — relax, rest
  • slickest — smooth and glossy; sleek.
  • stacking — a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers.
  • staticky — containing or producing static electricity.
  • stick at — to pierce or puncture with something pointed, as a pin, dagger, or spear; stab: to stick one's finger with a needle.
  • stick by — to pierce or puncture with something pointed, as a pin, dagger, or spear; stab: to stick one's finger with a needle.
  • stick it — to pierce or puncture with something pointed, as a pin, dagger, or spear; stab: to stick one's finger with a needle.
  • stick to — to pierce or puncture with something pointed, as a pin, dagger, or spear; stab: to stick one's finger with a needle.
  • stick up — a thrust with a pointed instrument; stab.
  • stick-on — a label, sticker, or the like, that has an adhesive backing.
  • stick-up — a thrust with a pointed instrument; stab.
  • stickful — as much set type as a composing stick will hold, usually about two column inches.
  • stickily — in a sticky manner
  • stickjaw — a food item that is difficult to chew such as toffee
  • stickler — a person who insists on something unyieldingly (usually followed by for): a stickler for ceremony.
  • stickley — Gustav [guhs-tahv,, goo s-tahf] /ˈgʌs tɑv,, ˈgʊs tɑf/ (Show IPA), 1858–1942, U.S. furniture designer, architect, and leader of the Arts and Craft Movement in America.
  • stickman — croupier (def 1).
  • stickout — a person who is outstanding or conspicuous, usually for superior endowments, talents, etc.: Jimmy Brown is the stickout among running backs.
  • stickpin — a decorative straight pin with a jeweled or ornamented head and a long shaft with a sheath for encasing the point, used for holding an ascot or necktie in place.
  • stocking — a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
  • stockish — like a block of wood; stupid.
  • stockist — a wholesale or retail establishment that stocks merchandise.
  • stricken — a past participle of strike.
  • strickle — a straightedge used for sweeping off heaped-up grain to the level of the rim of a measure.
  • stuckism — a British art movement, founded in 1999 by Billy Childish (born 1959) and Charles Thomson (born 1953) to advance new figurative painting (as opposed to conceptual art)
  • suckiest — disagreeable; unpleasant.
  • tackling — equipment, apparatus, or gear, especially for fishing: fishing tackle.
  • tailback — the offensive back who lines up farthest behind the line of scrimmage, as in a single wingback or double wingback formation.
  • tektitic — relating to tektites
  • the sick — sick or ill people collectively
  • thickest — having relatively great extent from one surface or side to the opposite; not thin: a thick slice.
  • thickety — full of or covered with thickets, dense brush or undergrowth
  • thickset — set thickly or in close arrangement; dense: a thickset hedge.
  • tick box — A tick box is a small square on a form, questionnaire, or test in which you put a tick to show that you agree with a statement.
  • tick off — a slight, sharp, recurring click, tap, or beat, as of a clock.
  • tickbird — any of various birds that feed on ticks, as an oxpecker.
  • ticketed — a slip, usually of paper or cardboard, serving as evidence that the holder has paid a fare or admission or is entitled to some service, right, or the like: a railroad ticket; a theater ticket.
  • ticklace — (in Newfoundland) a kittiwake
  • tickling — light touching
  • ticklish — sensitive to tickling.
  • tickseed — any of various plants having seeds resembling ticks, as a coreopsis or the bugseed.
  • ticktack — a repetitive sound, as of ticking, tapping, knocking, or clicking: the ticktack of high heels in the corridor.
  • ticktock — an alternating ticking sound, as that made by a clock.
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