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12-letter words containing c, u, d, a

  • re-educative — of or relating to re-education
  • reacquainted — to make more or less familiar, aware, or conversant (usually followed by with): to acquaint the mayor with our plan.
  • readjudicate — to pronounce or decree by judicial sentence.
  • recirculated — to move in a circle or circuit; move or pass through a circuit back to the starting point: Blood circulates throughout the body.
  • reduced mass — a quantity obtained when one particle is moving about another, larger particle that is also moving, equivalent to the mass of the smaller particle, were the larger particle not moving, and equal to the quotient of the product of the two masses divided by their sum.
  • res judicata — a thing adjudicated; a case that has been decided.
  • revictualledvictuals, food supplies; provisions.
  • rideau canal — a waterway in SE Ontario, Canada, connecting the Ottawa Riverin Ottawa to Lake Ontario in Kingston. 125 miles (202 km) long.
  • road surface — the surface of the road, often asphalt
  • rubber-faced — having a face with unusually mobile features: a rubber-faced comedian.
  • run commands — (operating system)   The expansion of the file name suffix, "rc", common to many Unix configuration files, e.g. .newsrc, .cshrc, .twmrc, elmrc, etc. Always abbreviated to /R C/ when spoken. Note, "rc" is not a typical filename extension as it doesn't start with a dot. The suffix "rc" derives from a script-creation utility in CTSS called "runcom".
  • sacred lotus — Indian lotus.
  • safe conduct — If you are given safe conduct, the authorities officially allow you to travel somewhere, guaranteeing that you will not be arrested or harmed while doing so.
  • safe-conduct — a document authorizing safe passage through a region, especially in time of war.
  • sandrocottus — Greek name of Chandragupta.
  • sapindaceous — belonging to the Sapindaceae, the soapberry family of plants.
  • sausage code — (humour, programming)   Code which, once you know the details of how it's made, you'll never want to use again.
  • scandalously — disgraceful; shameful or shocking; improper: scandalous behavior in public.
  • scouring pad — a small pad, as of steel wool or plastic mesh, used for scouring pots, pans, etc.
  • scout around — search
  • scout leader — the leader of a troop of Scouts
  • scratchbuild — to build a scale model of something from scratch, that is, from raw materials like wood, clay or paper
  • screw around — a metal fastener having a tapered shank with a helical thread, and topped with a slotted head, driven into wood or the like by rotating, especially by means of a screwdriver.
  • scuba diving — deep-sea swimming
  • secunderabad — a city in N Andhra Pradesh, in central India, part of Hyderabad: a former British military cantonment.
  • seed capsule — the part of a fruit enclosing the seeds; pericarp
  • snatch squad — a squad of soldiers or police trained to deal with demonstrations by picking out and arresting the alleged ringleaders
  • soda biscuit — a biscuit having soda and sour milk or buttermilk as leavening agents.
  • sound camera — a motion-picture camera that is capable of photographing silently at the normal speed of 24 fps and operating in synchronization with separate audio recording equipment.
  • sound change — any phonetic or phonological change in spoken language, for example the replacement of one speech sound with another, or the loss of a particular sound
  • square dance — hoedown, barn dance
  • square-dance — to perform or participate in a square dance.
  • square-faced — having a front shaped so as to be square or rectangular
  • src modula-3 — Version 2.11 compiler(->C), run-time, library, documentation The goal of Modula-3 is to be as simple and safe as it can be while meeting the needs of modern systems programmers. Instead of exploring new features, we studied the features of the Modula family of languages that have proven themselves in practice and tried to simplify them into a harmonious language. We found that most of the successful features were aimed at one of two main goals: greater robustness, and a simpler, more systematic type system. Modula-3 retains one of Modula-2's most successful features, the provision for explicit interfaces between modules. It adds objects and classes, exception handling, garbage collection, lightweight processes (or threads), and the isolation of unsafe features. conformance: implements the language defined in SPwM3. ports: i386/AIX 68020/DomainOS Acorn/RISCiX MIPS/Ultrix 68020/HP-UX RS/6000/AIX IBMRT/4.3 68000/NEXTSTEP i860/SVR4 SPARC/SunOS 68020/SunOS sun386/SunOS Multimax/4.3 VAX/Ultrix Mailing list: comp.lang.modula3 E-mail: Bill Kalsow <[email protected]> From DEC/SRC, Palo Alto, CA. "Modula-3 Report (revised)" Luca Cardelli et al.
  • standing cup — a tall decorative cup of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, having a raised cover.
  • stick around — to pierce or puncture with something pointed, as a pin, dagger, or spear; stab: to stick one's finger with a needle.
  • student card — a card verifying somebody's identity as a university student and entitling them to services, discounts, etc
  • subarachnoid — of, relating to, or situated below the arachnoid membrane.
  • subdeaconate — subdiaconate.
  • subdiaconate — the office or dignity of a subdeacon.
  • subduplicate — of the square root of ratios
  • suberic acid — a crystalline dibasic acid, C 8 H 1 4 O 4 , obtained especially from suberin, castor oil, and cork: used chiefly in the preparation of plastics and plasticizers.
  • subjudiciary — the judicial branch of government.
  • succedaneous — a substitute.
  • sugar-coated — Sugar-coated food is covered with a sweet substance made of sugar.
  • suicide pact — an agreement between two or more people to commit suicide together.
  • sunday punch — Boxing. the most powerful and effective punch of a boxer, especially the punch used in trying to gain a knockout.
  • supercharged — equipped with a supercharger.
  • surface road — a road or street level with its surroundings: surface roads and elevated highways.
  • sursum corda — the words “Lift up your hearts,” addressed by the celebrant of the Mass to the congregation just before the preface.
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