| BOBOLINKS | • bobolinks n. Plural of bobolink. • BOBOLINK n. a North American songbird of the warbler family. |
| BOOKLANDS | • booklands n. Plural of bookland. • BOOKLAND n. (Old English) in Old English law, land taken from the folkland or common land and granted by written charter to a private owner. |
| FOLKSONGS | • folksongs n. Plural of folksong. • folk␣songs n. Plural of folk song. • FOLKSONG n. a song of the folk music of an area. |
| KABLOONAS | • kabloonas n. Plural of kabloona. • KABLOONA n. (Inuit) a person who is not Inuit. |
| KILOPONDS | • kiloponds n. Plural of kilopond. • KILOPOND n. a unit of measurement equal to the gravitational force on a mass of one kilogram. |
| KNOTHOLES | • knotholes n. Plural of knothole. • KNOTHOLE n. a hole in a plank. |
| LOCKDOWNS | • lockdowns n. Plural of lockdown. • lock-downs n. Plural of lock-down. • LOCKDOWN n. the confinement of prisoners to their cells. |
| LOOKDOWNS | • lookdowns n. Plural of lookdown. • LOOKDOWN n. a marine fish. |
| MOONWALKS | • moonwalks n. Plural of moonwalk. • moonwalks v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of moonwalk. • MOONWALK v. to perform a moonwalk. |
| NOOSELIKE | • nooselike adj. Resembling or characteristic of a noose. • NOOSELIKE adj. like noose. |
| OERLIKONS | • Oerlikons n. Plural of Oerlikon. • OERLIKON n. (Swiss) a type of antiaircraft cannon. |
| ONLOOKERS | • onlookers n. Plural of onlooker. • on-lookers n. Plural of on-looker. • ONLOOKER n. a spectator. |
| SOLONCHAK | • solonchak n. A pale or grey soil found in arid to subhumid conditions with poor drainage. • SOLONCHAK n. (Russian) a pale or grey soil type found in arid to subhumid, poorly drained conditions. |
| SPOONLIKE | • spoonlike adj. Resembling or characteristic of a spoon. • SPOONLIKE adj. like a spoon. |
| TOWNSFOLK | • townsfolk n. The people who live in a town, especially the lower and middle classes. • TOWNSFOLK n. the people of a town, also TOWNFOLK. |
| WOOLSKINS | • woolskins n. Plural of woolskin. • WOOLSKIN n. a sheepskin with the wool still on it. |