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6-letter words containing k

  • frisks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of frisk.
  • frisky — lively; frolicsome; playful.
  • frocks — Plural form of frock.
  • fucked — to have sexual intercourse with.
  • fucker — an inconsequential, annoying, or disgusting person.
  • fuckup — a person who bungles or botches, especially a habitual bungler.
  • fukien — Older Spelling. Fujian.
  • funked — rotten; moldy.
  • funker — cowering fear; state of great fright or terror.
  • funkia — plantain lily.
  • furkid — an animal kept for companionship
  • fusker — a piece of software that generates obvious passwords and filenames in order to extract data that is held on free websites
  • gagaku — the select group of Japanese men who, as both dancers and musicians, perform the bugaku.
  • galyak — a sleek, flat fur made from lambskin or from the pelt of a young goat.
  • gasket — a rubber, metal, or rope ring, for packing a piston or placing around a joint to make it watertight.
  • gaskin — a gasket.
  • gawked — to stare stupidly; gape: The onlookers gawked at arriving celebrities.
  • gawker — Someone who gawks, someone who stares stupidly.
  • gdansk — a seaport in N Poland, on the Gulf of Danzig.
  • geckos — Plural form of gecko.
  • geeked — a digital-technology expert or enthusiast (a term of pride as self-reference, but often used disparagingly by others).
  • geekly — (rare) Concerning or typical of geeks.
  • geikieSir Archibald, 1835–1924, Scottish geologist.
  • gierek — Edward [ed-werd;; Polish ed-vahrt] /ˈɛd wərd;; Polish ˈɛd vɑrt/ (Show IPA), 1913–2001, Polish political leader: first secretary of the Polish Communist Party 1970–80.
  • gilyak — Nivkh.
  • gingko — The Ginkgo biloba, a tree native to East Asia having fan-shaped leaves and edible, fleshy yellow seeds, with no known close living relatives.
  • ginkgo — a large shade tree, Ginkgo biloba, native to China, having fan-shaped leaves and fleshy seeds with edible kernels: the sole surviving species of the gymnosperm family Ginkgoaceae, which thrived in the Jurassic Period, and existing almost exclusively in cultivation.
  • gks-3d — The three-dimensional version of GKS, a standard for graphics I/O (ISO 8805).
  • glinka — Mikhail Ivanovich [mi-kah-eel i-vah-nuh-vich;; Russian myi-khuh-yeel ee-vah-nuh-vyich] /mɪ kɑˈil ɪˈvɑ nə vɪtʃ;; Russian myɪ xʌˈyil iˈvɑ nə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1803–57, Russian composer.
  • gorked — Heavily sedated; knocked out.
  • greeks — Plural form of greek.
  • grikes — Plural form of grike.
  • grimkeSarah Moore, 1792–1873, and her sister Angelina Emily, 1805–79, U.S. abolitionists and women's-rights leaders.
  • gurkha — a member of a Rajput people, Hindu in religion, who achieved dominion over Nepal in the 18th century.
  • gyrkin — (obsolete) A male gyrfalcon.
  • h-back — a wingback or slotback
  • hacked — to place (something) on a hack, as for drying or feeding.
  • hackee — (US, dialect) The chickaree or red squirrel.
  • hacker — a person, as an artist or writer, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and mediocre work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts: As a painter, he was little more than a hack.
  • hackie — hack2 (def 7b).
  • hackle — one of the long, slender feathers on the neck or saddle of certain birds, as the domestic rooster, much used in making artificial flies for anglers.
  • hackly — rough or jagged, as if hacked: Some minerals break with a hackly fracture.
  • haiduk — one of a class of mercenary soldiers in 16th-century Hungary.
  • haikai — an informal type of linked verse originated by Bashō, a 17th-century Japanese poet.
  • haikou — a city on N Hainan island, in SE China.
  • haikus — Plural form of haiku.
  • hakari — a feast which follows a ceremonial funeral or other important occasion
  • hakeas — Plural form of hakea.
  • hakeem — a male given name.
  • hakham — a wise and learned person; sage.
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