11-letter words that end in ck
- quail clock — a clock that announces the hours by a sound resembling that of a quail.
- quarterback — a back in football who usually lines up immediately behind the center and directs the offense of the team.
- quarterdeck — the part of a weather deck that runs aft from the midship area or the mainmast to the stern or poop of a vessel.
- quick trick — a card, or group of cards, that will probably win the first or second trick in a suit, regardless of who plays it or at what declaration.
- radio shack — a room or structure, as on a ship, for housing radio equipment.
- record deck — a device on which vinyl records can be played, in order to listen to the music or other sounds on them
- report back — If you report back to someone, you tell them about something that they asked you to find out about.
- right-click — to depress the right-hand mouse button, as to display a menu.
- roman brick — a long, thin face brick, usually yellow-brown and having a length about eight times its thickness.
- rubber duck — duck-shaped bath toy
- rudderstock — the vertical member at the forward edge of a rudder, hinged at the sternpost and attached to the helm or steering gear.
- saddle back — any of various animals having markings on the back that resemble a saddle, as a male harp seal.
- safety lock — a lock designed to prevent picking.
- sales check — sales slip.
- sand-struck — (of bricks) made with a mold lined with sand to permit freeing.
- scratchback — an implement for scratching the back
- sheep track — a pathway made by and used by sheep, often in rocky or mountainous terrain, and sometimes followed by hikers
- shell shock — battle fatigue.
- sheriffwick — shrievalty.
- shuttlecock — Also called shuttle. the object that is struck back and forth in badminton and battledore, consisting of a feathered cork head and a plastic crown.
- singlestick — a short, heavy stick.
- singletrack — (of a railroad or section of a railroad's route) having but one set of tracks, so that trains going in opposite directions must be scheduled to meet only at points where there are sidings.
- sir patrick — Norman Bel [bel] /bɛl/ (Show IPA), 1893–1958, U.S. industrial and stage designer and architect.
- six o'clock — 6 P.M., 1800 hours
- slate black — a slightly purplish black.
- smart aleck — an obnoxiously conceited person.
- smock frock — a loose overgarment of linen or cotton, as that worn by European farm laborers. Compare blouse (def 3).
- snapperback — the center on the offensive team.
- snuff stick — a twig, stick, or brush used to apply snuff on the teeth or gums.
- sound block — a small block of wood for rapping with a gavel.
- sound check — an on-the-spot rehearsal by a band before a gig to enable the sound engineer to set up the mixer
- sound truck — a truck carrying a loudspeaker from which speeches, music, etc., are broadcast, as for advertising, campaigning, or the like.
- spatterdock — any of various water lilies of the genus Nuphar, having globular yellow flowers and growing in lakes or sluggish streams, especially N. advena, of the eastern U.S.
- speed check — a method of checking the speed at which vehicles are travelling, used by police
- spell check — to process (a document) with a spell checker; check the spelling of.
- spell-check — to process (a document) with a spell checker; check the spelling of.
- spring lock — a lock that fastens automatically by a spring.
- stagestruck — obsessed with the desire to become an actor or actress.
- stake truck — a truck or trailer with a stake body, as for hauling farm animals or feed bags.
- star-struck — captivated by famous people or by fame itself.
- steeplejack — a person who climbs steeples, towers, or the like, to build or repair them.
- stickleback — any of the small, pugnacious, spiny-backed fishes of the family Gasterosteidae, inhabiting northern fresh waters and sea inlets, the male of which builds and guards the nest.
- storm track — the path followed by the center of a cyclonic storm.
- strike back — retaliate
- super-slick — very well-executed or presented
- swage block — an iron block containing holes and grooves of various sizes, used for heading bolts and shaping objects not easily worked on an anvil.
- swan's neck — a shallow S-curve used in decorative work.
- sweep check — a maneuver for depriving an opponent of the puck by seizing it in the crook of one's stick and pulling it away with a movement in a long arc, the stick being held level or nearly level with the ice. Compare check1 (def 37).
- swivelblock — a block that supports a swivel
- taken aback — toward the back.