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34-letter words containing d, r, o, m, u, s

  • acquired immunodeficiency syndrome — AIDS.
  • adaptive transform acoustic coding — (algorithm)   (ATRAC) An audio compression algorithm, introduced by Sony for its Mini Disk, which relies on the masking of low-amplitude frequency components by temporaly adjacent high-amplitude components. ATRAC consists of a three-band subband encoder (0...5.5, 5.5...11, 11...22 kHz) and a MDCT based transformation encoder.
  • asymmetric digital subscriber loop — Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line
  • be charm, success, etc personified — to be very charming, successful, etc
  • consumer product safety commission — an independent regulatory agency, created in 1972, that protects the public against risk of injury from consumer products. Abbreviation: CPSC.
  • continuous system modeling program — (simulation)   (CSMP) A program for simulation of dynamics of continuous systems by numerical integration of complex systems of differential equations. CSMP is similar to CSSL.
  • distributed component object model — (programming)   (DCOM) Microsoft's extension of their Component Object Model (COM) to support objects distributed across a network. DCOM has been submitted to the IETF as a draft standard. Since 1996, it has been part of Windows NT and is also available for Windows 95. Unlike CORBA, which runs on many operating systems, DCOM is currently (Dec 1997) only implemented by Microsoft for Microsoft Windows and by Software AG, under the name "EntireX", for Unix and IBM mainframes. DCOM serves the same purpose as IBM's DSOM protocol. DCOM is broken because it's an object model that has no provisions for inheritance, one of the major reasons for object oriented programming in the first place.
  • distributed management environment — (DME) An OSF standard. It had reached the RFT stage.
  • extended system configuration data — (operating system)   (ESCD) An area of memory, not exceeding 32 kilobytes in size, used by MS-DOS(?) as NVRAM for PNP BIOS and PNP OS. It must be writeable at run time. Intel's ICU also uses ESCD to store information for PNP ISA cards and legacy ISA cards.
  • frequency division multiple access — frequency division multiplexing
  • from the sublime to the ridiculous — If you describe something as going from the sublime to the ridiculous, you mean that it involves a change from something very good or serious to something silly or unimportant.
  • gorno-badakhshan autonomous region — an autonomous region in SE Tadzhikistan (Tajikistan). 25,784 sq. mi. (63,700 sq. km). Capital: Khorog.
  • industrial development certificate — (in Britain) a certificate issued by the Department of the Environment to an industrial organization wishing to build or extend a factory, which has to accompany an application for planning permission
  • international standard book number — a unique, internationally utilized number code assigned to books for the purposes of identification and inventory control. Abbreviation: ISBN.
  • multiple instruction multiple data — Multiple Instruction/Multiple Data
  • perpetual motion of the first kind — motion of a hypothetical mechanism that continues indefinitely without any external source of energy. It is impossible in practice because of friction
  • processor system modeling language — (language)   (PSML) A language for simulating computer systems designs, implemented as a preprocessor to SIMSCRIPT.
  • put that in your pipe and smoke it — accept that fact if you can
  • recursive macro actuated generator — (tool)   (RMAG) Robert A. Magnuson, NIH ca 1970. A stand-alone macroprocessor for IBM 360/370 under VS or OS. Many built-in features and a library of several hundred macros. Several large systems were written in RMAG to generate source code for languages such as IBM JCL, IBM assembly language, COBOL. There was also a system (SLANG: Structured LANGuage compiler) which would generate 370 assembly language from a pseudo-structured-programming language, based on Michael Kessler's structure programming macros developed at IBM.
  • rumour/legend/tradition etc has it — You can use has it in expressions such as 'rumour has it that' or 'as legend has it' when you are quoting something that you have heard, but you do not necessarily think it is true.
  • securities and exchange commission — SEC.
  • social democratic and labour party — a Northern Irish political party, which advocates peaceful union with the Republic of Ireland
  • supreme-court-of-the-united-states — Supreme Court of the United States.
  • to shut the door in someone's face — If someone shuts the door in your face or slams the door in your face, they refuse to talk to you or give you any information.
  • under one roof/under the same roof — If a number of things or people are under one roof or under the same roof, they are in the same building.

On this page, we collect all 34-letter words with D-R-O-M-U-S. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 34-letter word that contains in D-R-O-M-U-S to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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