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35-letter words containing h, a, l, e, u

  • a hundred and one/a million and one — You can use expressions such as a hundred and one, a thousand and one, and a million and one to emphasize that you are talking about a large number of things or people.
  • acceptance, test or launch language — (language)   (ATOLL) The language used for automating the checking and launch of Saturn rockets.
  • african american vernacular english — Black English (def 1). Abbreviation: AAVE.
  • african-american vernacular english — a dialect of English typically spoken by working-class African-Americans
  • come into play/be brought into play — When something comes into play or is brought into play, it begins to be used or to have an effect.
  • eckert-mauchly computer corporation — (company)   The company which designed and built Univac computers.
  • fully automated compiling technique — (language)   (FACT, "Honeywell-800 Business Compiler") A pre-COBOL English-like business data processing language for the Honeywell 800, developed ca. 1959.
  • grateful/thankful for small mercies — If you tell someone who is in an unpleasant situation that they should be grateful or thankful for small mercies, you mean that although their situation is bad, it could be even worse, and so they should be happy.
  • he couldn't raffle a chook in a pub — he is incapable of carrying out even the simplest of tasks
  • let the grass grow under one's feet — any plant of the family Gramineae, having jointed stems, sheathing leaves, and seedlike grains. Compare grass family.
  • national guard of the united states — those members and units of the National Guard that have been accorded federal recognition as a reserve component of the Army or Air Force of the U.S.
  • out of a (or the) clear (blue) sky — without warning; suddenly
  • partial response maximum likelihood — (storage)   (PRML) A method for converting the weak analog signal from the head of a magnetic disk drive into a digital signal. PRML attempts to correctly interpret even small changes in the analog signal, whereas peak detection relies on fixed thresholds. Because PRML can correctly decode a weaker signal it allows higher density recording. For example, PRML would read the magnetic flux density pattern 70, 60, 55, 60, 70 as binary "101", and the same for 45, 40, 30, 40, 45. A peak detector would decode everything above, say, 50 as high, and below 50 as low, so the first pattern would read "111" and the second as "000".
  • perpetual motion of the second kind — motion of a hypothetical mechanism that derives its energy from a source at a lower temperature. It is impossible in practice because of the second law of thermodynamics
  • principle of mathematical induction — a law in set theory which states that if a set is a subset of the set of all positive integers and contains 1, and if for each number in the given set the succeeding natural number is in the set, then the given set is identical to the set of all positive integers. Compare induction (def 5).
  • sixty-four thousand dollar question — a crucial question or issue
  • subacute sclerosing panencephalitis — a rare infection of the central nervous system caused by the measles virus, occurring in children and adolescents several years after a measles attack and characterized by progressive personality changes, seizures, and muscular incoordination. Abbreviation: SSPE.
  • take up the slack/pick up the slack — To take up the slack or pick up the slack means to do or provide something that another person or organization is no longer doing or providing.
  • target-machine description language — (TMDL) The machine-description language used in the Graham-Glanville code generator.
  • to price yourself out of the market — If you price yourself out of the market, you try to sell goods or services at a higher price than other people, with the result that no one buys them from you.
  • trust-territory-the-pacific-islands — a U.S. trust territory in the Pacific Ocean, comprising the Mariana, Marshall, and Caroline Islands: approved by the United Nations 1947; since 1976 constituents of the trusteeship have established or moved toward self-government. 717 sq. mi. (1857 sq. km).
  • virgin islands of the united states — a territory of the US in the Caribbean, consisting of islands west and south of the British Virgin Islands: purchased from Denmark in 1917 for their strategic importance. Capital: Charlotte Amalie. Pop: 104 737 (2013 est). Area: 344 sq km (133 sq miles)

On this page, we collect all 35-letter words with H-A-L-E-U. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 35-letter word that contains in H-A-L-E-U to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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