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11-letter words containing a, c, r, e, f, o

  • mothercraft — skill and knowledge in looking after children
  • oceanfronts — Plural form of oceanfront.
  • office park — a complex of office buildings located on land planted with lawns, trees, bushes, etc.
  • olfactories — of or relating to the sense of smell: olfactory organs.
  • overcareful — excessively or unduly careful.
  • parfocalize — to make parfocal
  • performance — a musical, dramatic, or other entertainment presented before an audience.
  • poker-faced — an expressionless face: He can tell a funny story with a poker face.
  • rarefaction — the act or process of rarefying.
  • re-forecast — to predict (a future condition or occurrence); calculate in advance: to forecast a heavy snowfall; to forecast lower interest rates.
  • refactoring — (object-oriented, programming)   Improving a computer program by reorganising its internal structure without altering its external behaviour. When software developers add new features to a program, the code degrades because the original program was not designed with the extra features in mind. This problem could be solved by either rewriting the existing code or working around the problems which arise when adding the new features. Redesigning a program is extra work, but not doing so would create a program which is more complicated than it needs to be. Refactoring is a collection of techniques which have been designed to provide an alternative to the two situations mentioned above. The techniques enable programmers to restructure code so that the design of a program is clearer. It also allows programmers to extract reusable components, streamline a program, and make additions to the program easier to implement. Refactoring is usually done by renaming methods, moving fields from one class to another, and moving code into a separate method. Although it is done using small and simple steps, refactoring a program will vastly improve its design and structure, making it easier to maintain and leading to more robust code.
  • refocillate — to refresh, revive, give new life
  • reification — to convert into or regard as a concrete thing: to reify a concept.
  • reproachful — full of or expressing reproach or censure: a reproachful look.
  • rifacimento — a recast or adaptation, as of a literary or musical work.
  • rose chafer — a tan scarabaeid beetle, Macrodactylus subspinosis, that feeds on the flowers and foliage of roses, grapes, peach trees, etc.
  • round-faced — having a face that is round.
  • rubefaction — the act or process of making red, especially with a rubefacient.
  • sales force — team of salespeople
  • shear force — Shear force is force that makes one surface of a substance move over another parallel surface.
  • tidal force — the gravitational pull exerted by a celestial body that raises the tides on another body within the gravitational field, dependent on the varying distance between the bodies.
  • tractorfeed — Computers. a mechanism for aligning and transporting paper for a printer by means of pins that catch in perforations along the edges of the paper.
  • uncared for — If you describe people or animals as uncared for, you mean that they have not been looked after properly and as a result are hungry, dirty, or ill.
  • uncared-for — untended; neglected; unkempt: The garden had an uncared-for look.
  • unforceable — physical power or strength possessed by a living being: He used all his force in opening the window.
  • view factor — The view factor is the degree to which heat carried by radiation can be passed between two surfaces.
  • vital force — the force that animates and perpetuates living beings and organisms.
  • vociferance — vociferant utterance; vociferation.
  • woodcrafter — a person who makes or carves wooden objects.
  • worksurface — A surface, usually resting on cupboards or drawers in a kitchen, that can be used to work on.
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