Matching Words
203 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Knights
- noun - a chessman shaped to resemble the head of a horse; can move two squares horizontally and one vertically (or vice versa)
- Chevalier
- originally a person of noble birth trained to arms and chivalry; today in Great Britain a person honored by the sovereign for personal merit
- raise (someone) to knighthood; "The Beatles were knighted"
Knishes
- noun - (Yiddish) a baked or fried turnover filled with potato or meat or cheese; often eaten as a snack
Kurchis
- noun - tropical Asian tree with hard white wood and bark formerly used as a remedy for dysentery and diarrhea
Kutches
- noun - tannin extract derived from any of several mangrove barks of Pacific areas
Kwachas
- noun - the basic unit of money in Malawi
- the basic unit of money in Zambia
Larches
- noun - any of numerous conifers of the genus Larix all having deciduous needlelike leaves
- wood of a larch tree
Latches
- noun - catch for fastening a door or gate; a bar that can be lowered or slid into a groove
- fasten with a latch; "latch the door"
- spring-loaded doorlock that can only be opened from the outside with a key
Leaches
- noun - cause (a liquid) to leach or percolate
- permeate or penetrate gradually; "the fertilizer leached into the ground"
- remove substances from by a percolating liquid; "leach the soil"
- the process of leaching
Leashes
- noun - a figurative restraint; "asked for a collar on program trading in the stock market"; "kept a tight leash on his emotions"; "he's always gotten a long leash"
- fasten with a rope; "rope the bag securely"
- Old hunting term for three deer, hawks, hounds, hares or foxes
- restraint consisting of a rope (or light chain) used to restrain an animal
- the cardinal number that is the sum of one and one and one
Leeches
- noun - a follower who hangs around a host (without benefit to the host) in hope of gain or advantage
- carnivorous or bloodsucking aquatic or terrestrial worms typically having a sucker at each end
- draw blood; "In the old days, doctors routinely bled patients as part of the treatment"
- Leech – The aft (back) edge of a fore-and-aft sail is called the leech (also spelled leach).