Matching Words
77 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Casks
- noun - a cylindrical container that holds liquids
- the quantity a cask will hold
Cawky
- - Of or pertaining to cawk; like cawk.
Darks
- noun - absence of light or illumination
- absence of moral or spiritual values; "the powers of darkness"
- an unenlightened state; "he was in the dark concerning their intentions"; "his lectures dispelled the darkness"
- an unilluminated area; "he moved off into the darkness"
- the time after sunset and before sunrise while it is dark outside
Darky
- noun - (ethnic slur) offensive term for Black people
Gawks
- noun - an awkward stupid person
- gape
- look with amazement; look stupidly
Gawky
- adjective - lacking grace in movement or posture;
Hacks
- noun - a car driven by a person whose job is to take passengers where they want to go in exchange for money
- a horse kept for hire
- a mediocre and disdained writer
- a politician who belongs to a small clique that controls a political party for private rather than public ends
- a saddle horse used for transportation rather than sport etc.
- a tool (as a hoe or pick or mattock) used for breaking up the surface of the soil
- an old or over-worked horse
- be able to manage or manage successfully; "I can't hack it anymore"; "she could not cut the long days in the office"
- cough spasmodically; "The patient with emphysema is hacking all day"
- cut away; "he hacked his way through the forest"
- cut with a hacking tool
- fix a computer program piecemeal until it works; "I'm not very good at hacking but I'll give it my best"
- kick on the arms
- kick on the shins
- one who works hard at b
Haiks
- noun - an outer garment consisting of a large piece of white cloth; worn by men and women in northern Africa
Haiku
- noun - an epigrammatic Japanese verse form of three short lines
Hakka
- noun - a dialect of Chinese spoken in southeastern China by the Hakka
- a member of a people of southeastern China (especially Hong Kong, Canton, and Taiwan) who migrated from the north in the 12th century