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6-letter words that end in k

  • -speak — -speak is used to form nouns which refer to the kind of language used by a particular person or by people involved in a particular activity. You use -speak when you disapprove of this kind of language because it is difficult for other people to understand.
  • -think — a pattern or manner of thinking
  • actalk — (language)   A Smalltalk-based actor language developed by J-P Briot in 1989.
  • alcock — Sir John William. 1892–1919, English aviator who with A.W. Brown made the first nonstop flight across the Atlantic (1919)
  • amalek — a grandson of Esau: Gen. 36:9-12
  • amtrak — a government-owned organization providing intercity passenger railroad services in the US
  • anorak — An anorak is a warm waterproof jacket, usually with a hood.
  • antick — antic
  • arawak — a member of a South American Indian people living chiefly in NE South America and formerly in the West Indies
  • arrack — a coarse spirit distilled in various Eastern countries from grain, rice, sugar cane, etc
  • atabek — Turkish ruler
  • attack — To attack a person or place means to try to hurt or damage them using physical violence.
  • awrack — in a wrecked or ruined condition
  • baniak — (humorous pejorative slang, chiefly italicized) A fool.
  • banyak — Alternative form of baniak.
  • bartok — Béla (ˈbeːlɔ). 1881–1945, Hungarian composer, pianist, and collector of folk songs, by which his music was deeply influenced. His works include six string quartets, three piano concertos, several piano pieces including Mikrokosmos (1926–37), ballets (including The Miraculous Mandarin, 1919), and the opera Bluebeard's Castle (produced 1918)
  • battik — to hand-dye (material) using the technique of batik.
  • bedeck — If flags or other ornaments bedeck a place, a lot of them have been hung up to decorate it.
  • beduck — to duck under water
  • begunk — a deceiving trick
  • bemock — to mock
  • betook — simple past tense of betake.
  • bewick — Thomas. 1753–1828, English wood engraver; his best-known works are Chillingham Bull (1789), a large woodcut, Aesop's Fables (1818), and his History of British Birds (1797–1804)
  • bialik — Hayyim Nahman (ˈhaɪm ˈnɑxman) or Chaim Nachman. 1873–1934, Russian Jewish poet and writer. His long poems The Talmud Student (1894) and In the City of Slaughter (1903) established him as the major Hebrew poet of modern times
  • bipack — an obsolete filming process
  • bogoak — oak or other wood found preserved in peat bogs; bogwood
  • bohunk — a labourer from east or central Europe
  • bontok — a member of a people who inhabit northern Luzon in the Philippines.
  • bratsk — city in SC Siberian Russia, on the Angara River: pop. 258,000
  • bytalk — trivial conversation
  • bywork — work done outside usual working hours
  • canuck — a Canadian
  • carack — a merchant vessel having various rigs, used especially by Mediterranean countries in the 15th and 16th centuries; galleon.
  • chabuk — (in Asia, especially the East) a horsewhip, formerly often used for inflicting corporal punishment.
  • chaulk — (obsolete, now only nonstandard, rare) alternative spelling of chalk.
  • chaunk — (cooking) A garnish made by frying mustard seed, asafoetida, and other whole spices in oil or ghee to release the flavours. Added to soups, curries, etc., at the end of cooking.
  • chiack — to tease or banter
  • chyack — to jeer at; tease; deride.
  • cold-k — (language)   A formal design kernel language for describing (sequential) software systems in intermediate stages of their design.
  • copeck — kopeck
  • crojik — a triangular sail
  • cusack — Cyril (James). 1910–93, Irish actor
  • d-lock — a lock shaped like a capital D when locked
  • d-mark — deutsche mark
  • damask — Damask is a type of heavy cloth with a pattern woven into it.
  • debark — to remove the bark from (a tree)
  • debeak — to remove part of the beak of poultry to reduce the risk of such habits as feather-picking or cannibalism
  • debulk — (transitive, surgery) To remove part of (a malignant tumour).
  • debunk — If you debunk a widely held belief, you show that it is false. If you debunk something that is widely admired, you show that it is not as good as people think it is.
  • degunk — (informal, transitive) To remove gunk from.

On this page, we collect all 6-letter words ending in letter K. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 6-letter word that ends in K to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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