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5-letter words containing y, a, k

  • mawky — (Northern England, Appalachia) maggoty, full of maggots.
  • mckayClaude, 1890–1948, U.S. author, born in Jamaica: leader in the Harlem Renaissance.
  • narky — (UK, Australia, slang) Irritated, in a bad mood; disparaging.
  • okays — Plural form of okay.
  • parky — weather: chilly
  • pawky — cunning; sly.
  • peaky — peaked2 .
  • quaky — tending to quake; shaky or tremulous.
  • sarky — sarcastic.
  • shaky — tending to shake or tremble.
  • snaky — of or relating to snakes.
  • tacky — not tasteful or fashionable; dowdy.
  • talky — having or containing superfluous or purposeless talk, conversation, or dialogue, especially so as to impede action or progress: a talky play that bored the audience.
  • tanky — a member of the British Communist Party
  • tokay — an aromatic wine made from Furmint grapes grown in the district surrounding Tokay, a town in NE Hungary.
  • wacky — odd or irrational; crazy: They had some wacky plan for selling more books.
  • wanky — Contemptible, worthless, or stupid.
  • weaky — (UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Moist; damp; clammy.
  • yacks — Plural form of yack.
  • yakin — A large Himalayan antelope, Budorcas taxicolor.
  • yakka — work, especially hard work.
  • yakky — (informal) chatty, talkative.
  • yakow — a hybrid animal, produced by crossbreeding yaks with cows.
  • yakut — a member of a Turkic-speaking people of the Lena River valley and adjacent areas of eastern Siberia.
  • yanks — Plural form of yank.
  • yapok — an aquatic Central and South American opossum, Chironectes variegatus (or minimus), having webbed hind feet and a grayish coat.
  • yarak — a state of prime fitness in a hawk.
  • yokai — Any of various supernatural monsters, sometimes shapeshifters, in Japanese folklore.
  • ytalk — Version: V3.0 Patch Level 1. (networking, tool)   A multi-user chat program by Britt Yenne <[email protected]>. YTalk works almost exactly like the standard Unix talk program and even communicates with the same talk daemon(s), but YTalk supports multiple connections. Multiple user names may be given as command-line arguments, in the form "name#[email protected]" where the optional "#tty" specifies a particular tty. YTalk is able to communicate with both existing versions of Unix talk daemons. Once connected, typing escape gives access to a menu of commands to add or delete users, trace to a file, or set options. If run under the X Window System, YTalk will use separate X windows for each user in the conversaton, otherwise it will split the terminal screen between them. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • yurak — Nenets.
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