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11-letter words containing f, d, x

  • acid reflux — the regurgitation of stomach acid into the oesophagus, causing heartburn
  • bloody flux — dysentery.
  • detoxifying — Present participle of detoxify.
  • dorsiflexor — a muscle causing dorsiflexion.
  • end of text — control-C
  • exboyfriend — Alternative form of ex-boyfriend.
  • exemplified — Simple past tense and past participle of exemplify.
  • fauxbourdon — Music. a 15th-century compositional technique employing three voices, the upper and lower voices progressing an octave or a sixth apart while the middle voice extemporaneously doubles the upper part at a fourth below.
  • ferredoxins — Plural form of ferredoxin.
  • fixed asset — any long-term asset, as a building, tract of land, or patent.
  • fixed costs — a cost unvarying with a change in the volume of business (distinguished from variable cost).
  • fixed point — (mathematics)   The fixed point of a function, f is any value, x for which f x = x. A function may have any number of fixed points from none (e.g. f x = x+1) to infinitely many (e.g. f x = x). The fixed point combinator, written as either "fix" or "Y" will return the fixed point of a function. See also least fixed point.
  • fixed price — a price established by a seller, by agreement or by authority, as the price to be charged invariably.
  • fixed trust — unit trust (def 1).
  • fixed-point — (programming)   A number representation scheme where a number, F is represented by an integer I such that F=I*R^-P, where R is the (assumed) radix of the representation and P is the (fixed) number of digits after the radix point. On computers with no floating-point unit, fixed-point calculations are significantly faster than floating-point as all the operations are basically integer operations. Fixed-point representation also has the advantage of having uniform density, i.e., the smallest resolvable difference of the representation is R^-P throughout the representable range, in contrast to floating-point representations. For example, in PL/I, FIXED data has both a precision and a scale-factor (P above). So a number declared as 'FIXED DECIMAL(7,2)' has a precision of seven and a scale-factor of two, indicating five integer and two fractional decimal digits. The smallest difference between numbers will be 0.01.
  • fixed-price — option: with set cost
  • fixed-width — record
  • frederik ix — 1899–1972, king of Denmark 1947–72 (son of Christian X).
  • full-duplex — of or relating to the simultaneous, independent transmission of information in both directions over a two-way channel.
  • gold fixing — the procedure by which the price of gold is established.
  • half-duplex — of or relating to the transmission of information in opposite directions but not simultaneously.
  • next friend — a person other than a duly appointed guardian who acts on behalf of an infant or other person not fully qualified by law to act on his or her own behalf.
  • oxford bags — trousers with very wide baggy legs, originally popular in the 1920s
  • oxford blue — a dark blue colour
  • oxford gray — medium to dark gray.
  • oxford rule — a type that prints a thick line together with and parallel to a thin one.
  • oxford shoe — oxford (def 1).
  • oxford-down1st Earl of, Harley, Robert.
  • oxfordshire — a county in S England. 1008 sq. mi. (2610 sq. km).
  • tuxedo sofa — an overstuffed sofa with upholstered arms, either straight or curving slightly outward, at the same height as the back.
  • unfixedness — the state of being unfixed

On this page, we collect all 11-letter words with F-D-X. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 11-letter word that contains in F-D-X to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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