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9-letter words containing t, i, n, k

  • grunitskyNicolas, 1913–69, African statesman: president of the Republic of Togo 1963–67.
  • hand-knit — to knit by hand.
  • heartikin — a term of endearment: 'little heart'
  • 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.
  • hick town — an insulting way of referring to a small town in the countryside that is not deemed to be very sophisticated
  • hit skins — to have sexual intercourse
  • identikit — A picture of a person, especially one sought by the police, reconstructed from typical facial features according to witnesses' descriptions.
  • in pocket — a shaped piece of fabric attached inside or outside a garment and forming a pouch used especially for carrying small articles.
  • in shtuck — in trouble
  • in-basket — in-box.
  • ink stain — a mark made by ink
  • inkstands — Plural form of inkstand.
  • interbank — Agreed, arranged, or operating between banks.
  • interknit — to knit together, one with another; intertwine.
  • interknot — to knot together
  • interlink — to link, one with another.
  • interlock — to fit into each other, as parts of machinery, so that all action is synchronized.
  • interpeak — Between peaks.
  • intertask — Between tasks.
  • interwork — to work or weave together; interweave.
  • intrabank — Within a single bank (financial institution).
  • inuktitut — a dialect of Inuit, spoken in the Canadian Arctic.
  • isokontan — an alga whose zoospores have equal cilia
  • jacketing — Present participle of jacket.
  • junketing — Present participle of junket.
  • kaolinite — a very common mineral, hydrated aluminum disilicate, Al 2 Si 2 O 5 (OH) 4 , formed by the alteration of other minerals, especially feldspar: the most common constituent of kaolin.
  • katharine — a popular female first name
  • katherine — a female given name: from the Greek word meaning “pure.”.
  • kenneth i — surnamed MacAlpine. died 858, king of the Scots of Dalriada and of the Picts (?844–858): considered the first Scottish king
  • ketchikan — a seaport in SE Alaska: transportation and communications center.
  • ketogenic — the production of ketone bodies in the body, as in diabetes mellitus or low-carbohydrate weight-loss diets.
  • ketonemia — the presence of ketone bodies in the blood.
  • ketonuria — the presence of ketone bodies in the urine.
  • ketteringCharles Franklin, 1876–1958, U.S. engineer and inventor.
  • keynoting — Present participle of keynote.
  • khuzistan — a province in SW Iran, on the Persian Gulf. About 35,000 sq. mi. (90,650 sq. km). Capital: Ahwaz.
  • kibitzing — to act as a kibitzer.
  • kick turn — a turn from a stationary position in which a skier lifts one ski to a point where the heel is nearly at right angles to the snow, then faces the ski outward, sets it down in the direction to be turned, and swings the other ski around so that both skis are parallel.
  • kickstand — a device for supporting a bicycle or motorcycle when not in use, pivoted to the rear axle in such a way that it can be kicked down below the rear wheel.
  • kindliest — Superlative form of kindly.
  • kinematic — the branch of mechanics that deals with pure motion, without reference to the masses or forces involved in it.
  • kinetosis — any condition caused by motion of the body, as seasickness.
  • king post — a structural member running vertically between the apex and base of a triangular roof truss.
  • kingbolts — Plural form of kingbolt.
  • kingcraft — the art of ruling as king; royal statesmanship.
  • kingsport — a city in NE Tennessee.
  • kingstown — an island state in the S Windward Islands, in the SE West Indies comprising St. Vincent island and the N Grenadines: gained independence 1979. 150 sq. mi. (389 sq. km). Capital: Kingstown.
  • kintpuash — (Kintpuash) 1837?–73, Modoc leader.
  • kitchenerHoratio Herbert (1st Earl Kitchener of Khartoum and of Broome) 1850–1916, English field marshal and statesman.
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