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8-letter words containing e, n, t, i, c, r

  • erecting — Present participle of erect.
  • erection — The action of erecting a structure or object.
  • eructing — Present participle of eruct.
  • frenetic — frantic; frenzied.
  • gentrice — gentility; high birth.
  • gerontic — geriatric.
  • incenter — the center of an inscribed circle; that point where the bisectors of the angles of a triangle or of a regular polygon intersect.
  • incentre — the centre of an inscribed circle
  • inceptor — to take in; ingest.
  • incoterm — Alternative case form of Incoterm.
  • increate — not created; uncreated.
  • incretin — (biochemistry) A gastrointestinal hormone causing an increase in the amount of insulin released from the beta cells of the islets of Langerhans after eating, even before blood glucose levels become elevated.
  • indicter — One who indicts.
  • indirect — not in a direct course or path; deviating from a straight line; roundabout: an indirect course in sailing.
  • infector — to affect or contaminate (a person, organ, wound, etc.) with disease-producing germs.
  • injector — a person or thing that injects.
  • interact — to act one upon another.
  • intercal — (language, humour)   /in't*r-kal/ (Said by the authors to stand for "Compiler Language With No Pronounceable Acronym"). Possibly the most elaborate and long-lived joke in the history of programming languages. It was designed on 1972-05-26 by Don Woods and Jim Lyons at Princeton University. INTERCAL is purposely different from all other computer languages in all ways but one; it is purely a written language, being totally unspeakable. The INTERCAL Reference Manual, describing features of horrifying uniqueness, became an underground classic. An excerpt will make the style of the language clear: It is a well-known and oft-demonstrated fact that a person whose work is incomprehensible is held in high esteem. For example, if one were to state that the simplest way to store a value of 65536 in a 32-bit INTERCAL variable is: DO :1 <- #0$#256 any sensible programmer would say that that was absurd. Since this is indeed the simplest method, the programmer would be made to look foolish in front of his boss, who would of course have happened to turn up, as bosses are wont to do. The effect would be no less devastating for the programmer having been correct. INTERCAL has many other peculiar features designed to make it even more unspeakable. The Woods-Lyons implementation was actually used by many (well, at least several) people at Princeton. Eric S. Raymond <[email protected]> wrote C-INTERCAL in 1990 as a break from editing "The New Hacker's Dictionary", adding to it the first implementation of COME FROM under its own name. The compiler has since been maintained and extended by an international community of technomasochists and is consequently enjoying an unprecedented level of unpopularity. The version 0.9 distribution includes the compiler, extensive documentation and a program library. C-INTERCAL is actually an INTERCAL-to-C source translator which then calls the local C compiler to generate a binary. The code is thus quite portable.
  • intercom — an intercommunication system.
  • intercur — (obsolete, intransitive) To intervene; to come or occur in the meantime.
  • intercut — to cut from one type of shot to another, as from a long shot to a closeup.
  • internic — Internet Network Information Center
  • intertec — (company)   The computer manufacturer that built the Superbrain. All Intertec systems were sold, installed and serviced by dealers. Intertec manufactured the entire product including designing and producing the circuit boards and molding the cabinets. Intertec's first products were terminals - a dumb terminal called "Intertube" and a smart terminal that emulated various common terminals (VT100 etc.) called "The Emulator". The terminals looked similar to the Superbrain, but smaller.
  • intrench — Alternative form of entrench.
  • intrince — intricate or involved
  • iterance — iteration.
  • lincture — A linctus; medicine taken by licking with the tongue.
  • mcintireSamuel, 1757–1811, U.S. architect and woodcarver.
  • mcintyreJames Francis Aloysius, 1886–1979, U.S. Roman Catholic clergyman: cardinal from 1953; archbishop of Los Angeles 1948–70.
  • navicert — A form of passport permitting a neutral ship to traverse a blockade in wartime.
  • nearctic — belonging or pertaining to a geographical division comprising temperate Greenland and arctic North America, sometimes including high mountainous regions of the northern Temperate Zone.
  • necrotic — death of a circumscribed portion of animal or plant tissue.
  • negritic — of or relating to blacks or to the Negritos.
  • neoteric — modern; new; recent.
  • neuritic — inflammation of a nerve.
  • neurotic — pertaining to the nerves or to nerve disease; neural: no longer in technical use.
  • precinct — a district, as of a city, marked out for governmental or administrative purposes, or for police protection.
  • prentice — a male given name.
  • pretonic — a medicine that invigorates or strengthens: a tonic of sulphur and molasses.
  • reacting — to act or perform again.
  • reaction — a reverse movement or tendency; an action in a reverse direction or manner.
  • reincite — to incite again
  • reindict — (of a grand jury) to bring a formal accusation against, as a means of bringing to trial: The grand jury indicted him for murder.
  • reinduct — to install in an office, benefice, position, etc., especially with formal ceremonies: The committee inducted her as president.
  • reinfect — to affect or contaminate (a person, organ, wound, etc.) with disease-producing germs.
  • reinject — to force (a fluid) into a passage, cavity, or tissue: to inject a medicine into the veins.
  • renotice — an announcement or intimation of something impending; warning: a day's notice.
  • retching — to make efforts to vomit.
  • reticent — disposed to be silent or not to speak freely; reserved.
  • retinoic — containing or derived from retinoid
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