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13-letter words containing f, e, n, t, o

  • in the pay of — If you say that someone is in the pay of a certain person or group, you disapprove of the fact that they are being paid by and are working for that person or group, often secretly or illegally.
  • in the way of — similar to, like
  • inertia force — an imaginary force supposed to act upon an accelerated body, equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to the resultant of the real forces
  • inferiorities — Plural form of inferiority.
  • inferolateral — (anatomy) Both inferior and lateral.
  • infiltrometer — a device used to measure the infiltration capacity of a soil.
  • infinite loop — (programming)   (Or "endless loop") Where a piece of program is executed repeatedly with no hope of stopping. This is nearly always because of a bug, e.g. if the condition for exiting the loop is wrong, though it may be intentional if the program is controlling an embedded system which is supposed to run continuously until it is turned off. The programmer may also intend the program to run until interrupted by the user. An endless loop may also be used as a last-resort error handler when no other action is appropriate. This is used in some operating system kernels following a panic. A program executing an infinite loop is said to spin or buzz forever and goes catatonic. The program is "wound around the axle". A standard joke has been made about each generation's exemplar of the ultra-fast machine: "The Cray-3 is so fast it can execute an infinite loop in under 2 seconds!" See also black hole, recursion, infinite loop.
  • informal vote — an invalid vote or ballot
  • informalities — Plural form of informality.
  • informatively — giving information; instructive: an informative book.
  • infostructure — The technical infrastructure supporting an information system.
  • interferogram — a photographic record of light interference patterns produced with an interferometer, used for recording shock waves and fluid flow patterns.
  • interfunction — the kind of action or activity proper to a person, thing, or institution; the purpose for which something is designed or exists; role.
  • intolerant of — not able or willing to tolerate
  • jeffersontown — a town in N Kentucky.
  • jellification — The process or result of jellifying.
  • john fletcherJohn, 1579–1625, English dramatist: collaborated with Francis Beaumont 1606?–16; with Philip Massinger 1613–25.
  • law of nature — an empirical truth of great generality, conceived of as a physical (but not a logical) necessity, and consequently licensing counterfactual conditionals
  • leg-of-mutton — having the triangular shape of a leg of mutton: leg-of-mutton sail; a dress with leg-of-mutton sleeves.
  • legal fiction — an acceptance of something as true, for the sake of convenience; legal pretence
  • lifted domain — (theory)   In domain theory, a domain with a new bottom element added. Given a domain D, the lifted domain, lift D contains an element lift d corresponding to each element d in D with the same ordering as in D and a new element bottom which is less than every other element in lift D. In functional languages, a lifted domain can be used to model a constructed type, e.g. the type data LiftedInt = K Int contains the values K minint .. K maxint and K bottom, corresponding to the values in Int, and a new value bottom. This denotes the fact that when computing a value v = (K n) the computation of either n or v may fail to terminate yielding the values (K bottom) or bottom respectively. (In LaTeX, a lifted domain or element is indicated by a subscript \perp). See also tuple.
  • line of sight — Also called line of sighting. an imaginary straight line running through the aligned sights of a firearm, surveying equipment, etc.
  • liquefactions — Plural form of liquefaction.
  • loose-fitting — (of a garment) fitting loosely; not following the contours of the body closely.
  • lorentz force — the force on a charged particle moving through a region containing both electric and magnetic fields.
  • magnetiferous — (dated) Producing or conducting magnetism.
  • malfunctioned — Simple past tense and past participle of malfunction.
  • manifestation — an act of manifesting.
  • manufactories — Plural form of manufactory.
  • mellification — the production of honey from nectar
  • memo function — (programming)   (Or "memoised function") A function that remembers which arguments it has been called with and the result returned and, if called with the same arguments again, returns the result from its memory rather than recalculating it. Memo functions were invented by Professor Donald Michie of Edinburgh University. The idea was further developed by Robin Popplestone in his Pop2 language long before it was ever worked into LISP. This same principle is found at the hardware level in computer architectures which use a cache to store recently accessed memory locations. A Common Lisp package by Marty Hall <[email protected]> ftp://archive.cs.umbc.edu/pub/Memoization.
  • mesne profits — rents or profits accruing during the rightful owner's exclusion from his land
  • metafictional — Of, relating to, or being metafiction.
  • metafunctions — Plural form of metafunction.
  • metrification — metrication.
  • microfilament — a minute, narrow tubelike cell structure composed of a protein similar to actin, occurring singly and in bundles, involved in cytoplasmic movement and changes in cell shape.
  • mole fraction — the ratio of the number of moles of a given component of a mixture to the total number of moles of all the components.
  • monkey's fist — a ball-like knot used as an ornament or as a throwing weight at the end of a line.
  • monofilaments — Plural form of monofilament.
  • montefiascone — a town in central Italy: wine-growing area.
  • morning after — a period, as in the morning, when the aftereffects of excessive self-indulgence during the previous evening are felt, especially the aftereffects of excessive drinking of alcoholic beverages.
  • motherfucking — a mean, despicable, or vicious person.
  • munroe effect — the reinforcement of shock waves in the concave, hollow end of a shaped charge, producing a greater resultant wave and concentrating the explosion along the axis of the charge.
  • narrow-fisted — tight-fisted.
  • nectariferous — producing nectar.
  • neuroeffector — The junction site, where a motor neuron releases a neurotransmitter to affect a target, that acts like an effector.
  • neurofilament — (anatomy) A neurofibril.
  • nimble-footed — able to move the feet agilely and neatly
  • nine-to-fiver — of, relating to, or during the workday, especially the hours from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. when offices are characteristically open for business: the nine-to-five grind.
  • ninety-fourth — next after the ninety-third; being the ordinal number for 94.
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