7-letter words containing ker
- rockery — rock garden.
- rookery — a breeding place or colony of gregarious birds or animals, as penguins and seals.
- sakeret — the male saker
- sculker — one who skulks
- shakers — a person or thing that shakes.
- sharker — a person who fishes or hunts sharks
- shicker — alcoholic liquor.
- shikker — shicker
- shirker — a person who evades work, duty, responsibility, etc.
- shocker — a thick, bushy mass, as of hair.
- shooker — simple past tense of shake.
- shucker — a husk or pod, as the outer covering of corn, hickory nuts, chestnuts, etc.
- sickert — Walter Richard, 1860–1942, English painter.
- skanker — Slang. to dance rhythmically in a loose-limbed manner.
- skinker — a person who serves or pours liquor
- skulker — to lie or keep in hiding, as for some evil reason: The thief skulked in the shadows.
- slacker — a slack condition or part.
- sleeker — smooth or glossy, as hair, an animal, etc.
- slicker — a smooth or slippery place or spot or the substance causing it: oil slick.
- slinker — to walk about in a stealthy manner
- smacker — a dollar.
- smicker — beautiful, pretty or handsome
- snacker — a person who snacks or eats between main meals
- sneaker — a high or low shoe, usually of fabric such as canvas, with a rubber or synthetic sole.
- snicker — to laugh in a half-suppressed, indecorous or disrespectful manner.
- snooker — a variety of pool played with 15 red balls and 6 balls of colors other than red, in which a player must shoot one of the red balls, each with a point value of 1, into a pocket before shooting at one of the other balls, with point values of from 2 to 7.
- soakers — absorbent, knitted briefs or shorts, often of wool, used as a diaper cover on infants.
- spanker — Nautical. a fore-and-aft sail on the aftermost lower mast of a sailing vessel having three or more masts. a designation given to the mast abaft a mizzenmast, usually the aftermost mast in any vessel.
- sparker — a lover, swain, or beau.
- speaker — Tris(tram E.) 1888–1958, U.S. baseball player.
- spikery — High-Church Anglicanism
- stacker — a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers.
- stalker — a person who pursues game, prey, or a person stealthily.
- starker — Janos [yah-nawsh] /ˈyɑ nɔʃ/ (Show IPA), 1924–2013, U.S. cellist, born in Hungary.
- sticker — a person or thing that sticks.
- stinker — a person or thing that stinks.
- stocker — a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
- stonker — to hit hard; knock unconscious.
- stooker — shock2 (def 1).
- striker — a person or thing that strikes.
- stroker — someone or something that strokes
- swanker — dashing smartness, as in dress or appearance; style.
- thanker — to express gratitude, appreciation, or acknowledgment to: She thanked them for their hospitality.
- thicker — having relatively great extent from one surface or side to the opposite; not thin: a thick slice.
- thinker — French Le Penseur. a bronze statue (1879–89) by Rodin.
- tracker — a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
- trekker — hiker, walker
- tricker — a crafty or underhanded device, maneuver, stratagem, or the like, intended to deceive or cheat; artifice; ruse; wile.
- trucker — any of various forms of vehicle for carrying goods and materials, usually consisting of a single self-propelled unit but also often composed of a trailer vehicle hauled by a tractor unit.
- trunker — the main stem of a tree, as distinct from the branches and roots.