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30-letter words containing a, e, r, o, d, y

  • automatically programmed tools — (language)   (APT) A language for numerically controlled machine tools. Versions: APT II (IBM 704, 1958), APT III (IBM 7090, 1961).
  • berkeley software distribution — (operating system)   (BSD) A family of Unix versions developed by Bill Joy and others at the University of California at Berkeley, originally for the DEC VAX and PDP-11 computers, and subsequently ported to almost all modern general-purpose computers. BSD Unix incorporates paged virtual memory, TCP/IP networking enhancements and many other features. BSD UNIX 4.0 was released on 1980-10-19. The BSD versions (4.1, 4.2, and 4.3) and the commercial versions derived from them (SunOS, ULTRIX, Mt. Xinu, Dynix) held the technical lead in the Unix world until AT&T's successful standardisation efforts after about 1986, and are still widely popular. See also Berzerkeley, USG Unix.
  • british indian ocean territory — a UK Overseas Territory in the Indian Ocean: consists of the Chagos Archipelago (formerly a dependency of Mauritius) and formerly included (until 1976) Aldabra, Farquhar, and Des Roches, now administratively part of the Seychelles. Diego Garcia is an important US naval base
  • campus wide information system — (CWIS) Information and services made publicly available at university sites via kiosks running interactive computing systems, possibly via campus networks. Services routinely include directory information, calendars, bulletin boards and databases.
  • community antenna distribution — transmission of television signals by cable
  • computational adequacy theorem — This states that for any program (a non-function typed term in the typed lambda-calculus with constants) normal order reduction (outermost first) fails to terminate if and only if the standard semantics of the term is bottom. Moreover, if the reduction of program e1 terminates with some head normal form e2 then the standard semantics of e1 and e2 will be equal. This theorem is significant because it relates the operational notion of a reduction sequence and the denotational semantics of the input and output of a reduction sequence.
  • cross my heart and hope to die — promise
  • dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane — (organic chemistry) An organochlorine insecticide that is a metabolite of DDT.
  • electronic commerce dictionary — (publication)   A lexicon of electronic commerce terms. It includes over 900 terms and acronyms, and over 200 website addresses. It has entries on commerce over the World-Wide Web, Internet payment systems, The National Information Infrastructure, Electronic Data Interchange, Electronic Funds Transfer, Public Key Cryptography, smart cards and digital cash, computer and network security for commerce, marketing through electronic media.
  • erythrocyte sedimentation rate — the rate at which red blood cells settle in a vertical tube, used to detect the presence of disease; ESR
  • federal republic of yugoslavia — a former country in SE Europe, comprising Serbia and Montenegro, that was formed in 1991 but not widely internationally recognized until 2000; it was replaced by the Union of Serbia and Montenegro in 2003 (dissolved 2006)
  • hide your light under a bushel — If you hide your light under a bushel, you keep your abilities or good qualities hidden from other people.
  • magnetohydrodynamic generation — the production of electric power without the use of rotating machinery by passing a plasma through a magnetic field.
  • media gateway control protocol — (communications, protocol)   (MGCP) A protocol used within a Voice over IP system. MGCP is an IETF work in progress, it superseded SGCP. MGCP is an internal protocol used within a distributed system that appears to the outside world as a single VoIP gateway. This system is composed of a Call Agent, and a set of gateways, including at least one "media gateway" that performs the conversion of media signals between circuits and packets, and at least one "signalling gateway" when connected to an SS7 controlled network.
  • munchausen's syndrome by proxy — a mental disorder in which an individual derives emotional satisfaction from inflicting injury on others and then subjecting them to medical treatment
  • ordinary differential equation — Mathematics. an equation containing derivatives but not partial derivatives.
  • radio-frequency identification — (hardware)   (RFID) Small radio transponders or "tags" designed to be attached to items like products in a supermarket to allow the items to be identified and tracked by a remote system. Typically an RFID tag includes an integrated circuit that stores data and interfaces to the antenna, allowing the stored data to be retrieved by the remote system.
  • realtime disk operating system — (operating system)   A Data General operating system developed in the 1970s or 1980s. When used in conjuction with a BASIC (e.g. Business Basic) it could support 16 concurrent users at the record locking level and two printers all on 128K memory. Reputedly IBM wanted to license this for the first IBM PC but DG turned them down so they went to Microsoft instead. How different the world could have been.
  • social security administration — a division of the Department of Health and Human Services, created in 1946, that administers federal Social Security programs. Abbreviation: SSA.
  • système international d'unités — (unit, standard)   (SI - International System of Units) The standard set of units of measurement set by the 11th General Conference on Weights and Measures in 1960. There are seven base units: the metre (length), the kilogram (mass), the second (time), the ampere (electrical current), the kelvin (temperature), the mole (number of atoms) and the candela (luminous intensity). These are defined either in terms of physical properties such as the speed of light or, in the case of mass, by a "prototype" lump of platinum-iridium kept at BIPM. Derived units like meters per second (speed) are formed by combining base units. SI also specifies a list of prefixes (multipliers like "k" for 1000).
  • the life and soul of the party — If you refer to someone as the life and soul of the party, you mean that they are very lively and entertaining on social occasions, and are good at mixing with people. In American English, you usually say that they are the life of the party.
  • to get your hands on something — If you get your hands on something or lay your hands on something, you manage to find it or obtain it, usually after some difficulty.
  • to give somebody the runaround — if sb gives you the runaround or if you get the runaround from sb, they deliberately do not give you all the information or help that you want, and send you to another person or place to get it
  • to keep body and soul together — If you keep body and soul together, you have enough money to provide what you need to live.
  • to lend your name to something — If you lend your name to something such as a cause or project, you support it.
  • to make your hair stand on end — Something that makes your hair stand on end shocks or frightens you very much.
  • to put your cards on the table — If you put or lay your cards on the table, you deal with a situation by speaking openly about your feelings, ideas, or plans.
  • unplanned shutdown of refinery — An unplanned shutdown of refinery is when processes in a refinery are stopped unexpectedly, often because something hazardous has happened.
  • upright database technology ab — (company)   The Swedish company that developed the Mimer SQL database.

On this page, we collect all 30-letter words with A-E-R-O-D-Y. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 30-letter word that contains in A-E-R-O-D-Y to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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