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35-letter words containing a, c, i, u, l, e

  • african american vernacular english — Black English (def 1). Abbreviation: AAVE.
  • african-american vernacular english — a dialect of English typically spoken by working-class African-Americans
  • algebraic logic functional language — (language)   (ALF) A language by Rudolf Opalla <[email protected]> which combines functional programming and logic programming techniques. ALF is based on Horn clause logic with equality which consists of predicates and Horn clauses for logic programming, and functions and equations for functional programming. Any functional expression can be used in a goal literal and arbitrary predicates can occur in conditions of equations. ALF uses narrowing and rewriting. ALF includes a compiler to Warren Abstract Machine code and run-time support.
  • city and guilds of london institute — (in Britain) an examining body for technical and craft skills, many of the examinations being at a lower standard than for a degree
  • come into play/be brought into play — When something comes into play or is brought into play, it begins to be used or to have an effect.
  • concurrent object-oriented language — (language)   (COOL) An extension of C++ with task-level parallelism for shared-memory multi-processors. E-mail: Rohit Chandra <[email protected]>.
  • customer information control system — (communications, database)   (CICS) An IBM communications system that was converted for database handling.
  • digital simultaneous voice and data — (communications)   (DSVD) A technique supported by some modems for multiplexing compressed speech with digital data for transmission over a normal telephone line. DSVD isn't standardised yet, so generally you have to have the same make of modem at both ends for it to work.
  • dijkstra's guarded command language — (language)   A language invented by Edsger Dijkstra ca. 1974. It introduced the concept of guards and committed choice nondeterminism (don't care nondeterminism). Described and used in ["A Discipline of Programming", E. Dijkstra, P-H 1976].
  • eckert-mauchly computer corporation — (company)   The company which designed and built Univac computers.
  • federal insurance contributions act — a law requiring that employees and employers alike contribute towards the cost of Social Security and Medicare
  • fully automated compiling technique — (language)   (FACT, "Honeywell-800 Business Compiler") A pre-COBOL English-like business data processing language for the Honeywell 800, developed ca. 1959.
  • grateful/thankful for small mercies — If you tell someone who is in an unpleasant situation that they should be grateful or thankful for small mercies, you mean that although their situation is bad, it could be even worse, and so they should be happy.
  • he couldn't raffle a chook in a pub — he is incapable of carrying out even the simplest of tasks
  • institute for global communications — (IGC) Provider of computer networking tools for international communications and information exchange. The IGC Networks -- PeaceNet, EcoNet, ConflictNet and LaborNet -- comprise the world's only computer communications system dedicated solely to environmental preservation, peace, and human rights. New technologies are helping these worldwide communities cooperate more effectively and efficiently. Address: 18 De Boom Street, San Francisco, CA 94107 USA. A division of the Tides Foundation, a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organisation. A founding member of the world-wide Association of Progressive Communications (APC). E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • international computers limited plc — (company)   (ICL) A UK hardware and software manufacturer specialising in systems integration in selected markets, supported by its service and technology businesses. ICL operates in over 80 countries worldwide, with 24000 employees and revenues of £2.6 billion in 1993. ICL produced George 2, George 3, VME, OpenVME, Series 39, DME, CME, the ICL 1900 and ICL 2900 series.
  • international scientific vocabulary — a vocabulary of scientific and technical words, terms, formulas, and symbols that are almost universally understood by scientists and similarly used in at least two languages. Abbreviation: ISV.
  • inverse address resolution protocol — (networking, protocol)   (InARP) Additions to ARP typically used for Frame Relay. [Any other examples of its use?] InARP allows a station to determine a protocol address (e.g. IP address) from a DLCI. This is useful if a new virtual circuit becomes available. Signalling messages announce its DLCI, but without the corresponding protocol address it is unusable: no frames can be routed to it. See RFC 2390.
  • moldavian soviet socialist republic — a republic of the U.S.S.R.
  • multisystem extention interface bus — (hardware)   (MXIbus) A high performance communication link that interconnects devices using round, flexible cable. MXIbus is used between a GPIB card and a VXI cage.
  • national information infrastructure — (project)   (NII, or "information superhighway") Future integrated communications in the USA. The NII will be based on a nationwide network of networks, and will supposedly allow all Americans to take advantage of the country's information, communication, and computing resources. The NII will include current and future public and private high-speed, interactive, narrow-band and broadband networks. It is the satellite, terrestrial, and wireless communications systems that deliver content to homes, businesses, and other public and private institutions. It is the information and content that flows over the infrastructure whether in the form of databases, the written word, a film, a piece of music, a sound recording, a picture, or computer software. It is the computers, televisions, telephones, radios, and other products that people will employ to access the infrastructure. It is the people who will provide, manage, and generate new information, and those that will help others do the same. And it is the individual Americans who will use and benefit from the NII. The NII is a term that encompasses all these components and captures the vision of a nationwide, invisible, seamless, dynamic web of transmission mechanisms, information appliances, content, and people.
  • national science foundation network — (NSFNET) A high speed hierarchical "network of networks" in the US, funded by the National Science Foundation. At the highest level, it is a backbone network comprising 16 nodes connected to a 45Mb/s facility which spans the continental United States. Attached to that are mid-level networks and attached to the mid-levels are campus and local networks. NSFNET also has connections out of the US to Canada, Mexico, Europe, and the Pacific Rim. The NSFNET is part of the Internet.
  • perpetual motion of the second kind — motion of a hypothetical mechanism that derives its energy from a source at a lower temperature. It is impossible in practice because of the second law of thermodynamics
  • principle of mathematical induction — a law in set theory which states that if a set is a subset of the set of all positive integers and contains 1, and if for each number in the given set the succeeding natural number is in the set, then the given set is identical to the set of all positive integers. Compare induction (def 5).
  • reverse address resolution protocol — (networking, protocol)   (RARP) A protocol defined in RFC 903 which provides the reverse function of ARP. RARP maps a hardware address (MAC address) to an IP address. It is used primarily by diskless nodes, when they first initialise, to find their IP address. See also BOOTP.
  • single-line digital subscriber line — (communications, protocol)   (SDSL, or Single-pair High Speed Digital Subscriber Line, S-HDSL) A form of Digital Subscriber Line similar to HDSL but providing T1 or E1 connections over a single twisted-pair copper line.
  • standard instrument control library — (SICL) A platform-independent API for software to control and test electronic instruments conforming to IEEE 488.
  • subacute sclerosing panencephalitis — a rare infection of the central nervous system caused by the measles virus, occurring in children and adolescents several years after a measles attack and characterized by progressive personality changes, seizures, and muscular incoordination. Abbreviation: SSPE.
  • take up the slack/pick up the slack — To take up the slack or pick up the slack means to do or provide something that another person or organization is no longer doing or providing.
  • target-machine description language — (TMDL) The machine-description language used in the Graham-Glanville code generator.
  • to price yourself out of the market — If you price yourself out of the market, you try to sell goods or services at a higher price than other people, with the result that no one buys them from you.
  • trust-territory-the-pacific-islands — a U.S. trust territory in the Pacific Ocean, comprising the Mariana, Marshall, and Caroline Islands: approved by the United Nations 1947; since 1976 constituents of the trusteeship have established or moved toward self-government. 717 sq. mi. (1857 sq. km).
  • ukrainian soviet socialist republic — a republic of the U.S.S.R.: now Ukraine
  • union of soviet socialist republics — former country in E Europe & N Asia, extending from the Arctic Ocean to the Black Sea & from the Baltic Sea to the Pacific: formed in 1922 as a union of fifteen constituent republics, it was disbanded in 1991: 8,649,000 sq mi (22,401,000 sq km); cap. Moscow

On this page, we collect all 35-letter words with A-C-I-U-L-E. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 35-letter word that contains in A-C-I-U-L-E to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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