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7-letter words that end in ack

  • ack-ack — anti-aircraft fire
  • airpack — an apparatus consisting of a face mask connected to a portable air supply, as an air tank that can be strapped to one's back, used especially by firefighters and search teams in areas of smoke, poisonous fumes, intense heat, etc.
  • barrack — A barracks is a building or group of buildings where soldiers or other members of the armed forces live and work. 'Barracks' is the singular and plural form.
  • buyback — an agreement to buy something in return, as by a supplier to buy its customer's product
  • calpack — A kind of cap from Turkic countries, with a high crown.
  • carjack — to attack (a driver in a car) in order to rob the driver or to steal the car for another crime
  • carrack — a galleon sailed in the Mediterranean as a merchantman in the 15th and 16th centuries
  • cd rack — a rack for storing CDs
  • commack — a town on central Long Island, in SE New York.
  • cormack — Allan (MacLeod)1924-98; U.S. physicist, born in South Africa
  • cossack — (formerly) any of the free warrior-peasants of chiefly East Slavonic descent who lived in communes, esp in Ukraine, and served as cavalry under the tsars
  • cutback — A cutback is a reduction that is made in something.
  • cuttack — a city in NE India, in E Odisha (formerly Orissa) near the mouth of the Mahanadi River: former state capital until 1948. Pop: 535 139 (2001)
  • daypack — a small rucksack
  • daysack — a small bag carried on the back for items that will be required in the course of a day out
  • dieback — a condition in a plant in which the branches or shoots die from the tip inward, caused by any of several bacteria, fungi, or viruses or by certain environmental conditions.
  • fanback — (of a chair) having a fan-shaped back.
  • fatback — Chiefly South Midland and Southern U.S. the fat and fat meat from the upper part of a side of pork, usually cured by salt.
  • faxback — An interactive electronic service allowing documents to be downloaded via fax machine.
  • finback — any baleen whale of the genus Balaenoptera, having a prominent dorsal fin, especially B. physalus, of the Atlantic and Pacific coasts; rorqual: an endangered species.
  • flyback — the return to its starting point of the electron beam in a cathode ray tube, as after the completion of a line in a television picture or of a trace in an oscilloscope.
  • go back — return
  • harnack — Adolf von [ah-dawlf fuh n] /ˈɑ dɔlf fən/ (Show IPA), 1851–1930, German Protestant theologian, born in Estonia.
  • hartackWilliam John, Jr ("Bill") 1932–2007, U.S. jockey.
  • hatrack — a frame, stand, or post having knobs or hooks for hanging hats.
  • hayrack — a rack for holding hay for feeding horses or cattle.
  • hogback — a long, sharply crested ridge, generally formed of steeply inclined strata that are especially resistant to erosion.
  • hopsack — bagging made chiefly of hemp and jute.
  • icepack — Alternative spelling of ice pack.
  • jampack — Alternative spelling of jam-pack.
  • jetpack — a jet-powered backpack used by astronauts to move around in space away from a spacecraft.
  • kaolack — a city in W Senegal.
  • layback — Figure Skating. a spin, usually performed by a woman, in which the upper body is arched backward and the free leg lifted and turned out from the hip.
  • linpack — 1. A package of linear algebra routines. 2. The kernel benchmark developed from the "LINPACK" package of linear algebra routines. It was written by Jack Dongarra <[email protected]> in Fortran and is commonly used in that language but there is also a C version. Source Code by FTP: single precision Fortran, double precision Fortran, C.
  • maniack — Obsolete form of maniac.
  • manjack — a west Indian tree with slimy fruit
  • manpack — a compact load able to be carried by one person
  • mudpack — a pastelike preparation, as one consisting of fuller's earth, astringents, etc., used on the face as a cosmetic restorative.
  • netback — a calculation of the price of crude-oil products based on the price of crude oil.
  • nethack — (games)   /net'hak/ (Unix) A dungeon game similar to rogue but more elaborate, distributed in C source over Usenet and very popular at Unix sites and on PC-class machines (nethack is probably the most widely distributed of the freeware dungeon games). The earliest versions, written by Jay Fenlason and later considerably enhanced by Andries Brouwer, were simply called "hack". The name changed when maintenance was taken over by a group of hackers originally organised by Mike Stephenson. Version: NetHack 3.2 (Apr 1996?). E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • outback — (sometimes initial capital letter) the back country or remote settlements; the bush (usually preceded by the).
  • payback — the period of time required to recoup a capital investment.
  • pollack — a food fish, Pollachius pollachius, of the cod family, inhabiting coastal North Atlantic waters from Scandinavia to northern Africa.
  • prepack — a package assembled by a manufacturer, distributor, or retailer and containing a specific number of items or a specific assortment of sizes, colors, flavors, etc., of a product.
  • ransack — to search thoroughly or vigorously through (a house, receptacle, etc.): They ransacked the house for the missing letter.
  • ratpack — a close-knit group of people with common interests who participate in various professional and recreational activities together.
  • redback — a small venomous Australian spider, Latrodectus hasselti, having long thin legs and, in the female, a red stripe on the back of its globular abdomen
  • restack — a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers.
  • retrack — to track again
  • runback — Football. a run made by a player toward the goal line of the opponents after receiving a kick, intercepting a pass, or recovering an opponent's fumble. the distance covered in making such a run.

On this page, we collect all 7-letter words ending in ACK. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 7-letter word that ends in ACK to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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