7-letter words that end in ock
- haycock — a small conical pile of hay stacked in a hayfield while the hay is awaiting removal to a barn.
- hemlock — a poisonous plant, Conium maculatum, of the parsley family, having purple-spotted stems, finely divided leaves, and umbels of small white flowers, used medicinally as a powerful sedative.
- hillock — a small hill.
- hommock — hummock (def 3).
- hoolock — a type of gibbon (genus Hoolock) of Northeastern India and parts of Myanmar and Bangladesh, the males of which have black fur and white brows
- hummock — Also, hammock. an elevated tract of land rising above the general level of a marshy region.
- in hock — If someone is in hock, they are in debt.
- jannock — honest; fair; straightforward.
- jonnock — genuine; real
- kebbock — a home-made or special cheese
- keylock — any lock unlocked with a key.
- kinnock — Neil (Gordon). Baron. born 1942, British Labour politician, born in Wales; leader of the Labour Party (1983–92); a European commissioner (1995–2004) and vice-president of the European Commission (1999–2004)
- leacock — Stephen (Butler) 1869–1944, Canadian humorist and economist.
- liplock — (chiefly, US, informal) A kiss; especially a long, passionate one.
- lubbock — Sir John, 1st Baron Avebury, 1834–1913, English author, natural scientist, and statesman.
- maddock — (obsolete) an earthworm, a maggot.
- mammock — a fragment; scrap.
- matlock — a town in England, on the River Derwent, administrative centre of Derbyshire: mineral springs. Pop: 11 265 (2001)
- mattock — an instrument for loosening the soil in digging, shaped like a pickax, but having one end broad instead of pointed.
- meacock — (obsolete) An uxorious, effeminate, or spiritless man.
- mullock — (in Australasia) refuse or rubbish, as rock or earth, from a mine; muck.
- netrock — /net'rok/ (IBM) A flame; used especially on VNET, IBM's internal corporate network.
- o'clock — of, by, or according to the clock (used in specifying the hour of the day): It is now 4 o'clock.
- oarlock — any of various devices providing a pivot for an oar in rowing, especially a swiveling, crutchlike or ringlike metal device projecting above a gunwale.
- outrock — to outdo in rocking
- paddock — Archaic. a frog or toad.
- padlock — a portable or detachable lock with a pivoted or sliding shackle that can be passed through a link, ring, staple, or the like.
- parrock — a small field or enclosure; a pen
- peacock — the male of the peafowl distinguished by its long, erectile, greenish, iridescent tail coverts that are brilliantly marked with ocellated spots and that can be spread in a fan.
- petcock — a small valve or faucet, as for draining off excess or waste material from the cylinder of a steam engine or an internal-combustion engine.
- piddock — any bivalve mollusk of the genus Pholas or the family Pholadidae, having long, ovate shells and burrowing in soft rock, wood, etc.
- pillock — idiot
- pinnock — any of various small songbirds such as the dunnock
- pollock — Also called saithe. a North Atlantic food fish, Pollachius virens, of the cod family.
- popsock — a knee-length nylon sock, worn under trousers
- porlock — to interrupt or intrude at an awkward moment
- prerock — of the era before rock music
- puttock — a bird of prey, esp the buzzard and the red kite
- re-cock — to cock (a gun) again
- reblock — a solid mass of wood, stone, etc., usually with one or more flat or approximately flat faces.
- restock — refill, replenish with supplies
- rimrock — rock forming the natural boundary of a plateau or other rise.
- rollock — rowlock.
- rostock — a seaport in N Germany, on the Baltic.
- rowlock — Architecture. one of several concentric rings of masonry forming an arch.
- ruddock — robin (def 1).
- schlock — Also, schlocky. cheap; trashy: a schlock store.
- seacock — a valve in the hull of a vessel for admitting outside water into some part of the hull, as a ballast tank.
- shylock — a relentless and revengeful moneylender in Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice.
- sillock — a young coalfish