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10-letter words containing e, t, o

  • curiousest — (non-standard) Superlative form of curious.
  • customable — subject to customs
  • customised — to modify or build according to individual or personal specifications or preference: to customize an automobile.
  • customized — modified according to a customer's individual requirements
  • customizer — a person who customizes
  • customizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of customize.
  • cut flower — any pretty flower cut for a floral arrangement.
  • cut no ice — to fail to make an impression
  • cutesy-poo — embarrassingly or sickeningly cute.
  • cuttlebone — the internal calcareous shell of the cuttlefish, used as a mineral supplement to the diet of cage-birds and as a polishing agent
  • cyanometer — an instrument used for measuring the blueness of the sky
  • cyanophyte — a former name for a cyanobacterium
  • cyanotypes — Plural form of cyanotype.
  • cyberstore — (computing) A website that allows users to browse and then order products or services via the Internet.
  • cyclometer — a device that records the number of revolutions made by a wheel and hence the distance travelled
  • cyclostome — any primitive aquatic jawless vertebrate of the class Cyclostomata, such as the lamprey and hagfish, having a round sucking mouth and pouchlike gills
  • cyclostyle — a kind of pen with a small toothed wheel, used for cutting minute holes in a specially prepared stencil. Copies of the design so formed can be printed on a duplicator by forcing ink through the holes
  • cyclothyme — a person suffering from cyclothymia
  • cyrtostyle — a convex portico, as at an entrance.
  • cystectomy — surgical removal of the gall bladder or of part of the urinary bladder
  • cystoceles — Plural form of cystocele.
  • cystometer — a device for determining the reaction of the urinary bladder to increased internal pressure.
  • cystoscope — a slender tubular medical instrument for examining the interior of the urethra and urinary bladder
  • cytochrome — any of a group of naturally occurring compounds, consisting of iron, a protein, and a porphyrin, that are important in cell oxidation-reduction reactions
  • cytologies — the study of the microscopic appearance of cells, especially for the diagnosis of abnormalities and malignancies.
  • cytometric — of or relating to cytometry
  • czernowitz — German name of Cernăuţi.
  • dagobert i — a.d. 602?–639, Merovingian king of the Franks 628–639.
  • dantrolene — a toxic orange powder, C 14 H 10 N 4 O 5 , used to control muscle spasms, as in the treatment of local trauma, multiple sclerosis, cerebral palsy, or other neurological disorders.
  • data glove — (hardware, virtual reality)   An input device for virtual reality in the form of a glove which measures the movements of the wearer's fingers and transmits them to the computer. Sophisticated data gloves also measure movement of the wrist and elbow. A data glove may also contain control buttons or act as an output device, e.g. vibrating under control of the computer. The user usually sees a virtual image of the data glove and can point or grip and push objects. Examples are Fifth Dimension Technologies (5DT)'s 5th Glove, and Virtual Technologies' CyberGlove. A cheaper alternative is InWorld VR's CyberWand.
  • data model — (database)   The product of the database design process which aims to identify and organize the required data logically and physically. A data model says what information is to be contained in a database, how the information will be used, and how the items in the database will be related to each other. For example, a data model might specify that a customer is represented by a customer name and credit card number and a product as a product code and price, and that there is a one-to-many relation between a customer and a product. It can be difficult to change a database layout once code has been written and data inserted. A well thought-out data model reduces the need for such changes. Data modelling enhances application maintainability and future systems may re-use parts of existing models, which should lower development costs. A data modelling language is a mathematical formalism with a notation for describing data structures and a set of operations used to manipulate and validate that data. One of the most widely used methods for developing data models is the entity-relationship model. The relational model is the most widely used type of data model. Another example is NIAM.
  • datacode i — (language)   An early system used on the Datatron 200 series.
  • datagloves — Plural form of dataglove.
  • davenports — Plural form of davenport.
  • de-isolate — to remove from isolation.
  • dead point — dead center
  • dead stock — farm equipment
  • deaeration — the act of extracting a gas from a liquid
  • dealbation — the process of bleaching or making white
  • deallocate — to set apart for a particular purpose; assign or allot: to allocate funds for new projects.
  • death blow — If you say that an event or action deals a death blow to something such as a plan or hope, or is a death blow to something, you mean that it puts an end to it.
  • death code — A routine whose job is to set everything in the computer - registers, memory, flags - to zero, including that portion of memory where it is running; its last act is to stomp on its own "store zero" instruction. Death code isn't very useful, but writing it is an interesting hacking challenge on architectures where the instruction set makes it possible, such as the PDP-8 or the Data General Nova. Perhaps the ultimate death code is on the TI 990 series, where all registers are actually in RAM, and the instruction "store immediate 0" has the opcode 0. The program counter will immediately wrap around core as many times as it can until a user hits HALT. Any empty memory location is death code. Worse, the manufacturer recommended use of this instruction in startup code (which would be in ROM and therefore survive).
  • death roll — a list of the people killed in a war or disaster
  • death toll — The death toll of an accident, disaster, or war is the number of people who die in it.
  • deathblows — Plural form of deathblow.
  • debtholder — (finance) An owner of a financial obligation of another party.
  • decalogist — a person who interprets and expounds on the Ten Commandments
  • decastylos — a decastyle building, as a classical temple.
  • decathlons — Plural form of decathlon.
  • deceptions — Plural form of deception.
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