0%

32-letter words containing a, d, i, n, t

  • able to do something blindfolded — able to do something very easily, for example because of having done it many times before
  • administration management domain — (networking)   (ADMD) An X.400 Message Handling System public service carrier. The ADMDs in all countries worldwide together provide the X.400 backbone. Examples: MCImail and ATTmail in the U.S., British Telecom Gold400mail in the U.K. See also PRMD.
  • advanced communications function — (networking)   (ACF) A group of IBM SNA products that provide distributed processing and resource sharing such as VTAM and NCP.
  • advanced peer-to-peer networking — (networking, product)   (APPN) IBM data communications support that routes data in a network between two or more APPC systems that need not be adjacent.
  • alice's adventures in wonderland — a story for children (1865) by Lewis Carroll.
  • applications development manager — (job)   (Or "Director") The person in a company who plans and oversees multiple projects and project managers. The Applications Development Managers works with the CIO and senior management to determine systems development strategy and standards. He or she administers department budget and reviews project managers.
  • artificial insemination by donor — a form of artificial insemination in which the semen is not supplied by the woman's partner
  • as different as chalk and cheese — If you say that two people or things are like chalk and cheese, you are emphasizing that they are completely different from each other.
  • azimuthal equidistant projection — a projection in which the shortest distance between any point and a central point is a straight line, such a line representing a great circle through the central point.
  • bardeen-cooper-schrieffer theory — BCS theory.
  • beggar belief/beggar description — If something beggars belief, it is impossible to believe it. If something beggars description, it is impossible to describe it.
  • black data processing associates — (body)   (BDPA) A non-profit professional association, founded in 1975 to promote positive influence in the information technology (IT) industry and how it affects African Americans. The BDPA facilitates African American professional participation in local and national activities keeping up with developing IT trends. BDPA offers a forum for exchanging information and ideas about the computer industry. It provides numerous networking opportunities through monthly program meetings, seminars, and workshops and the annual national conference. Membership is open to anyone interested in IT. The Foundation provides scholarships to students who compete in an annual Visual Basic competition. E-mail: <[email protected]>. Telephone: Ms. Pat Drumming, +1 (800) 727-BDPA.
  • british association screw thread — a system of screw sizes designated from 0 to 25. Now superseded by standard metric sizes
  • british broadcasting corporation — the full name of the BBC, the official public broadcasting organization in the UK, which is funded by licence fees paid by everyone who uses a television receiver
  • broadcasting standards authority — a New Zealand Crown Entity that develops and upholds standards of broadcasting for radio and television
  • certified professional secretary — a person holding an official certificate, issued by the National Secretaries Association, attesting to the holder's having specific secretarial knowledge and skills. Abbreviation: CPS.
  • cleanliness is next to godliness — If someone says that cleanliness is next to godliness, they are referring to the idea that people have a moral duty to keep themselves and their homes clean.
  • closed-circuit television camera — a television camera transmitting signals to receivers by cables or telephone links forming a closed circuit, as used in security systems, etc
  • computer generation incorporated — (company)   (CGI) A US software development company and systems integrator. E-mail: Paul G. Smith <[email protected]> Telephone: +1 (404) 705 2800 Address: Bldg. G, 4th Floor, 5775 Peachtree-Dunwoody Rd., Atlanta, GA 30342, USA.
  • cumulative distribution function — a function defined on the sample space of a distribution and taking as its value at each point the probability that the random variable has that value or less. The function F(x) = P(X≤x) where X is the random variable, which is the sum or integral of the probability density function of the distribution
  • democratic-republic-of-the-congo — People's Republic of the, a republic in central Africa, W of the Democratic Republic of the Congo: formerly an overseas territory in French Equatorial Africa; now an independent member of the French Community. 132,046 sq. mi. (341,999 sq. km). Capital: Brazzaville. Formerly French Congo, Middle Congo.
  • direct broadcasting by satellite — the production of satellite television broadcasts intended for home reception
  • electronic funds transfer system — electronic funds transfer
  • electronics industry association — (body, standard)   (EIA) A body which publishes "Recommended Standards" (RS) for physical devices and their means of interfacing. EIA-232 is their standard that defines a computer's serial port, connector pin-outs, and electrical signaling.
  • everythng/anything under the sun — Everything under the sun means a very great number of things. Anything under the sun means anything at all.
  • fiber distributed data interface — (FDDI) A 100 Mbit/s ANSI standard local area network architecture, defined in X3T9.5. The underlying medium is optical fibre (though it can be copper cable, in which case it may be called CDDI) and the topology is a dual-attached, counter-rotating token ring. FDDI rings are normally constructed in the form of a "dual ring of trees". A small number of devices, typically infrastructure devices such as routers and concentrators rather than host computers, are connected to both rings - these are referred to as "dual-attached". Host computers are then connected as single-attached devices to the routers or concentrators. The dual ring in its most degenerate form is simply collapsed into a single device. In any case, the whole dual ring is typically contained within a computer room. This network topology is required because the dual ring actually passes through each connected device and requires each such device to remain continuously operational (the standard actually allows for optical bypasses but these are considered to be unreliable and error-prone). Devices such as workstations and minicomputers that may not be under the control of the network managers are not suitable for connection to the dual ring. As an alternative to a dual-attached connection, the same degree of resilience is available to a workstation through a dual-homed connection which is made simultaneously to two separate devices in the same FDDI ring. One of the connections becomes active while the other one is automatically blocked. If the first connection fails, the backup link takes over with no perceptible delay.
  • get something down to a fine art — to become highly proficient at something through practice
  • go over with a fine-toothed comb — to examine very carefully and thoroughly
  • have one's head screwed on right — the upper part of the body in humans, joined to the trunk by the neck, containing the brain, eyes, ears, nose, and mouth.
  • have sb eating out of one's hand — If you have someone eating out of your hand, they are completely under your control.
  • heaven/god/lord/christ etc knows — People use expressions such as goodness knows, Heaven knows, and God knows when they do not know something and want to suggest that nobody could possibly know it.
  • hold a pistol to a person's head — to threaten a person in order to force him to do what one wants
  • indexed sequential access method — (database)   (ISAM) An IBM file management system allowing records to be accessed either sequentially (in the order they were entered) or via an index. Each index orders the records on a different key. ISAM was followed by VSAM (Virtual Storage Access Method) and pre-dated relational databases.
  • indiana dunes national lakeshore — a shore area in N Indiana, on Lake Michigan: established in 1966 for recreation and conservation purposes; comprising shoreline, dunes, bogs, and forests. 14 sq. mi. (36 sq. km).
  • intact dilatation and extraction — dilation and extraction. Abbreviation: IDE.
  • international trade organization — a now defunct organization whose original purpose was to regulate international trade. Its mandate is now under the World Trade Organization.
  • junction field effect transistor — (electronics)   (JFET, Junction FET) A Field Effect Transistor in which the conducting channel lies between pn junctions in the silicon material. A pn junction acts as a diode, so it becomes conductive if the gate voltage gets reversed.
  • lisp extended algebraic facility — (language)   (LEAF)
  • lymphadenopathy-associated virus — See under AIDS virus. Abbreviation: LAV.
  • lymphokine-activated killer cell — LAK cell.
  • make it one's business to do sth — If you make it your business to do something, you decide to do it, because you are interested in it or because you want to find out something.
  • manufacturers' recommended price — the retail price that a manufacturer recommends for selling their product
  • microsoft data access components — (database)   (MDAC) Microsoft's umbrella term for their ActiveX Data Objects (ADO), OLE DB, and Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) libraries. Together, these provide access to a variety of data sources, both relational (SQL) and nonrelational. MDAC is the technology that supports Universal Data Access, Microsoft's strategy for providing access to information across the enterprise.
  • national industrial recovery act — an act of Congress (1933, declared unconstitutional in 1936) that enabled the president and the National Recovery Administration to formulate and execute measures for reducing industrial unemployment. Abbreviation: NIRA, N.I.R.A.
  • national recovery administration — NRA.
  • nondeterministic polynomial time — (complexity)   (NP) A set or property of computational decision problems solvable by a nondeterministic Turing Machine in a number of steps that is a polynomial function of the size of the input. The word "nondeterministic" suggests a method of generating potential solutions using some form of nondeterminism or "trial and error". This may take exponential time as long as a potential solution can be verified in polynomial time. NP is obviously a superset of P (polynomial time problems solvable by a deterministic Turing Machine in polynomial time) since a deterministic algorithm can be considered as a degenerate form of nondeterministic algorithm. The question then arises: is NP equal to P? I.e. can every problem in NP actually be solved in polynomial time? Everyone's first guess is "no", but no one has managed to prove this; and some very clever people think the answer is "yes". If a problem A is in NP and a polynomial time algorithm for A could also be used to solve problem B in polynomial time, then B is also in NP. See also Co-NP, NP-complete.
  • null-terminated multibyte string — (programming)   (NTMBS) (Defined in the ANSI C++ draft)
  • office of defense transportation — the World War II federal agency (1941–45) that regulated the transport over public routes of goods considered vital to the war effort. Abbreviation: ODT.
  • on pain of sth/under pain of sth — If someone is ordered not to do something on pain of or under pain of death, imprisonment, or arrest, they will be killed, put in prison, or arrested if they do it.
  • open document interchange format — (standard)   (ODIF) Part of the ODA standard.

On this page, we collect all 32-letter words with A-D-I-N-T. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 32-letter word that contains in A-D-I-N-T to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?