0%

7-letter words containing d, i, c, o

  • ochroid — yellow as ocher.
  • octadic — Of or pertaining to an octad; eightfold.
  • octofid — split into eight sections
  • odontic — relating to teeth
  • officed — Simple past tense and past participle of office.
  • orchids — Plural form of orchid.
  • outchid — to express disapproval of; scold; reproach: The principal chided the children for their thoughtless pranks.
  • ovicide — a substance or preparation, especially an insecticide, capable of killing egg cells.
  • oviduct — either of a pair of tubes that transport the ova from the ovary to the exterior, the distal ends of which form the uterus and vagina in higher mammals.
  • oxyacid — an inorganic acid containing oxygen.
  • parodic — having or of the nature of a parody.
  • percoid — belonging to the Percoidea, a group of acanthopterygian fishes comprising the true perches and related families, and constituting one of the largest natural groups of fishes.
  • phacoid — having a form or structure like that of a lens
  • picador — one of the mounted assistants to a matador, who opens the bullfight by enraging the bull and weakening its shoulder muscles with a lance.
  • piddock — any bivalve mollusk of the genus Pholas or the family Pholadidae, having long, ovate shells and burrowing in soft rock, wood, etc.
  • placoid — platelike, as the scales or dermal investments of sharks.
  • podalic — pertaining to the feet.
  • poditic — relating to the limb segment of a crustacean
  • ricardoDavid, 1772–1823, English economist.
  • ripcord — a cord on a parachute that, when pulled, opens the parachute for descent.
  • roddick — Anita. 1942–2007, British entrepreneur, founder (1976) of the Body Shop chain, selling natural beauty and health products
  • sarcoid — a growth resembling a sarcoma.
  • secondi — the second or lower part in a duet, especially in a piano duet.
  • synodic — Astronomy. pertaining to a conjunction, or to two successive conjunctions of the same bodies.
  • unicode — 1.   (character)   A 16-bit character set standard, designed and maintained by the non-profit consortium Unicode Inc. Originally Unicode was designed to be universal, unique, and uniform, i.e., the code was to cover all major modern written languages (universal), each character was to have exactly one encoding (unique), and each character was to be represented by a fixed width in bits (uniform). Parallel to the development of Unicode an ISO/IEC standard was being worked on that put a large emphasis on being compatible with existing character codes such as ASCII or ISO Latin 1. To avoid having two competing 16-bit standards, in 1992 the two teams compromised to define a common character code standard, known both as Unicode and BMP. Since the merger the character codes are the same but the two standards are not identical. The ISO/IEC standard covers only coding while Unicode includes additional specifications that help implementation. Unicode is not a glyph encoding. The same character can be displayed as a variety of glyphs, depending not only on the font and style, but also on the adjacent characters. A sequence of characters can be displayed as a single glyph or a character can be displayed as a sequence of glyphs. Which will be the case, is often font dependent. See also Jörgen Bettels and F. Avery Bishop's paper Unicode: A universal character code. 2.   (language)   A pre-Fortran on the IBM 1130, similar to MATH-MATIC.
  • vidicon — a camera tube in which a charge-density pattern is formed on a photoconductive surface scanned by a beam of low-velocity electrons for transmission as signals.
  • viscoid — somewhat viscous.
  • zipcode — Alternative spelling of zip code.
  • zodiacs — Plural form of zodiac.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?