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

  • a spider's web of something — a tangled arrangement
  • andean community of nations — a trading block composed of Bolivia, Ecuador, Columbia, and Peru, with associate members Argentina, Brasil, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay
  • aperture for drilling fluid — An aperture for drilling fluid is an opening for controlling the flow of drilling mud.
  • audit bureau of circulation — an organization that collects, audits, and publishes monthly circulation figures for newspapers and magazines
  • automatic frequency control — a system in a radio or television receiver by which the tuning of an incoming signal is accurately maintained
  • bachman information systems — (company)   The company which merged with CADRE to form Cayenne Software in July 1996.
  • balance of payments deficit — a situation in which imports of goods, services, investment income and transfers exceed the exports of goods, services, investment income and transfers.
  • block transfer computations — (algorithm, humour)   (From the UK television series "Dr. Who") Computations so fiendishly subtle and complex that they could not be performed by machines. Used to refer to any task that should be expressible as an algorithm in theory, but isn't.
  • brouwer fixed-point theorem — the theorem that for any continuous transformation of a circle into itself, including its boundary, there is at least one point that is mapped to itself.
  • butterflies in your stomach — If you have butterflies in your stomach or have butterflies, you are very nervous or excited about something.
  • centers for disease control — the branch of the U.S. Public Health Service under the Department of Health and Human Services charged with the investigation and control of contagious disease in the nation. Abbreviation: CDC.
  • certificate of indebtedness — a short-term, negotiable, interest-bearing note representing indebtedness.
  • certified public accountant — A certified public accountant is someone who has received a certificate stating that he or she is qualified to work as an accountant within a particular state. The abbreviation CPA is also used.
  • chancellor of the exchequer — The Chancellor of the Exchequer is the minister in the British government who makes decisions about finance and taxes.
  • chief cook and bottlewasher — a person or machine that washes bottles.
  • church of christ, scientist — the official name of the Christian Science Church.
  • church of the new jerusalem — the church composed of the followers of Swedenborg; the Swedenborgian church.
  • committee of correspondence — an intercolonial committee organized 1772 by Samuel Adams in Massachusetts to keep colonists informed of British anticolonial actions and to plan colonial resistance or countermeasures.
  • common internet file system — (protocol)   (CIFS) An Internet file system protocol, based on Microsoft's SMB. Microsoft has given CIFS to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) as an Internet Draft. CIFS is intended to complement existing protocols such as HTTP, FTP, and NFS. CIFS runs on top of TCP/IP and uses the Internet's Domain Name Service (DNS). It is optimised to support the slower speed dial-up connections common on the Internet. CIFS is more flexible than FTP. FTP operations are carried out on entire files whereas CIFS is aimed at routine data access and incorporates high-performance multi-user read and write operations, locking, and file-sharing semantics. CIFS is probably closest in functionality to NFS. NFS gives random access to files and directories, but is stateless. With CIFS, once a file is open, state about the current access to that file is stored on both the client and the server. This allows changes on the server side to be notified to the clients that are interested.
  • comptroller of the currency — an official of the U.S. Department of the Treasury who regulates the national banks and administers the issuance and redemption of Federal Reserve notes.
  • convertible preferred stock — preferred stock that can be exchanged for a fixed number of shares of the common stock of the issuing company at the holder's option.
  • countably additive function — a set function that upon operating on the union of a countable number of disjoint sets gives the same result as the sum of the functional values of each set.
  • counter electromotive force — an electromotive force that is created by a chemical or magnetic effect upon a circuit and that acts in opposition to the applied electromotive force of the circuit.
  • court of domestic relations — a court, usually with a limited jurisdiction, that handles legal cases involving a family, especially controversies between parent and child or between the marriage partners.
  • crude oil refining capacity — The crude oil refining capacity is the amount that is produced in a refinery each day.
  • cut one's eye after someone — to look rudely at a person and then turn one's face away sharply while closing one's eyes: a gesture of contempt
  • declaration of independence — the proclamation made by the second American Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, which asserted the freedom and independence of the 13 Colonies from Great Britain
  • doesn't suffer fools gladly — If you do not suffer fools gladly, you are not patient with people who you think are stupid.
  • educational welfare officer — (in Britain) a local education authority worker whose job it is to find out whether difficulties outside school are contributing to a child's classroom problems or irregular attendance and who may intervene to help the child to benefit more from schooling
  • familiarity breeds contempt — Familiarity is used especially in the expression familiarity breeds contempt to say that if you know a person or situation very well, you can easily lose respect for that person or become careless in that situation.
  • feast of st. peter's chains — a former festival in England, held on August 1, in which bread made from the first harvest of corn was blessed.
  • figment of sb's imagination — If you say that something is a figment of someone's imagination, you mean that it does not really exist and that they are just imagining it.
  • first law of thermodynamics — any of three principles variously stated in equivalent forms, being the principle that the change of energy of a thermodynamic system is equal to the heat transferred minus the work done (first law of thermodynamics) the principle that no cyclic process is possible in which heat is absorbed from a reservoir at a single temperature and converted completely into mechanical work (second law of thermodynamics) and the principle that it is impossible to reduce the temperature of a system to absolute zero in a finite number of operations (third law of thermodynamics)
  • floating-point specbaserate — SPECrate_base_fp92
  • floccinaucinihilipilificate — (colloquial) To describe, estimate or regard something as worthless.
  • fly-on-the-wall documentary — a documentary made by filming people as they do the things they normally do, rather than by interviewing them or asking them to talk directly to the camera
  • force down someone's throat — the passage from the mouth to the stomach or to the lungs, including the pharynx, esophagus, larynx, and trachea.
  • go off at (or on) a tangent — to break off suddenly from a line of action or train of thought and pursue another course
  • graphics interchange format — (graphics, file format)   /gif/, occasionally /jif/ (GIF, GIF 89A) A standard for digitised images compressed with the LZW algorithm, defined in 1987 by CompuServe (CIS). Graphics Interchange Format and GIF are service marks of CompuServe Incorporated. This only affects use of GIF within Compuserve, and pass-through licensing for software to access them, it doesn't affect anyone else's use of GIF. It followed from a 1994 legal action by Unisys against CIS for violating Unisys's LZW software patent. The CompuServe Vice President has stated that "CompuServe is committed to keeping the GIF 89A specification as an open, fully-supported, non-proprietary specification for the entire on-line community including the web". See also progressive coding, animated GIF.
  • grow out of one's knowledge — to behave in a presumptuous or conceited manner
  • hashemite kingdom of jordan — official name of Jordan.
  • have a frog in one's throat — to experience temporary hoarseness due to throat irritation
  • have the ball at one's feet — to have the chance of doing something
  • health and safety inspector — a person who inspects workplaces, to check that they do not pose dangers to workers
  • higher national certificate — a work-related higher education qualification, taking two years part-time, or a year full-time.
  • hypertext transfer protocol — (protocol)   (HTTP) The client-server TCP/IP protocol used on the web for the exchange of HTML documents. It conventionally uses port 80. See also Uniform Resource Locator.
  • importance of being earnest — a comedy (1895) by Oscar Wilde.
  • in (or out of) the picture — considered (or not considered) as involved in a situation
  • in (or out of) the running — in (or out of) the competition; having a (or no) chance to win
  • in an ideal/a perfect world — You can use in an ideal world or in a perfect world when you are talking about things that you would like to happen, although you realize that they are not likely to happen.

On this page, we collect all 27-letter words with F-E-N-T-O. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 27-letter word that contains in F-E-N-T-O to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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