| BALKER | • balker n. One who, or that which balks. • balker n. A person who stands on a rock or eminence to observe shoals of herring, etc., and to give notice to… • BALKER n. one who, or that which balks. |
| CALKER | • calker n. One who calks. • calker n. A calk on a shoe. • CALKER n. a pointed piece on a horseshoe to prevent slipping, also CALK, CALKIN, CAWKER. |
| DARKLE | • darkle v. To be dark; to be visible only darkly. • darkle v. To become dark; to show indistinctly. • DARKLE v. to grow dark; to show indistinctly. |
| FLAKER | • flaker n. (Archaeology, chemistry, kitchen) A tool or appliance used to break flakes off a piece of material or… • flaker n. (Slang) Someone who is untrue to his commitments and shows interest but then chooses to miss. • FLAKER n. someone or something that flakes. |
| GRAKLE | • grakle n. Archaic form of grackle. • GRAKLE n. a kind of American blackbird, also GRACKLE. |
| LACKER | • lacker n. One who is lacking, or in want. • lacker n. Obsolete spelling of lacquer. • lacker v. Obsolete spelling of lacquer. |
| LAIKER | • LAIKER n. one who sports or plays. |
| LAKERS | • lakers n. Plural of laker. • Lakers n. Plural of Laker. • LAKER n. a fish found in lakes; a type of ship which trades only in the Great Lakes of North America. |
| LAKIER | • lakier adj. Comparative form of laky: more laky. • LAKY adj. full of lakes. |
| LANKER | • lanker adj. Comparative form of lank: more lank. • LANK adj. long and thin. |
| LARKED | • larked v. Simple past tense and past participle of lark. • LARK v. to behave playfully. |
| LARKER | • larker n. A catcher of larks (the bird). • larker n. One who indulges in a lark or frolic. • LARKER n. a catcher of larks. |
| LEAKER | • leaker n. Somebody who leaks information. • leaker n. Anything that leaks. • LEAKER n. something that leaks. |
| LEKVAR | • lekvar n. A sweet spread made from apricots or prunes. • LEKVAR n. (Hungarian) a prune butter. |
| RACKLE | • rackle n. (Countable, UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) A chain. • rackle n. (Uncountable, UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Noisy talk. • rackle v. (UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) To talk noisily; rattle on. |
| RANKLE | • rankle v. (Transitive or intransitive) To cause irritation or deep bitterness. • rankle v. (Intransitive) To fester. • rankle n. (Rare) A festering, embittering object or condition, either mental, or a physical sore or ulcer. |
| SLAKER | • slaker n. A machine that slakes, or mixes a substance with water. • SLAKER n. one who slakes. |
| TALKER | • talker n. A person who talks, especially one who gives a speech, or is loquacious or garrulous. • talker n. Any creature or machine that talks. • talker n. (Informal, media) A talk show. |
| WALKER | • walker n. The agent noun of to walk: a person who walks or a thing which walks, especially a pedestrian or a participant… • walker n. A walking frame or baby walker. • walker n. (Often in the plural) A shoe designed for comfortable walking. (Can we add an example for this sense?) |