0%

7-letter words containing i, n, c, o, e

  • noetics — the science of the intellect or of pure thought; reasoning.
  • noticed — an announcement or intimation of something impending; warning: a day's notice.
  • noticer — Someone who notices.
  • notices — Plural form of notice.
  • nourice — a nurse.
  • novices — a person who is new to the circumstances, work, etc., in which he or she is placed; beginner; tyro: a novice in politics.
  • oceania — the islands of the central and S Pacific, including Micronesia, Melanesia, Polynesia, and traditionally Australasia. About 3,450,000 sq. mi. (8,935,500 sq. km).
  • oceanic — of, living in, or produced by the ocean: oceanic currents.
  • oceanid — any of the daughters of Oceanus and Tethys; a sea nymph.
  • oneiric — of or relating to dreams.
  • oriency — the state of having an iridescent lustre
  • pericon — Argentinian dance
  • phocine — of or relating to seals.
  • pinocle — a popular card game played by two, three, or four persons, with a 48-card deck.
  • porcine — of or relating to swine.
  • rection — the determination of the form of one word by the presence of another word in a phrase or sentence
  • secondi — the second or lower part in a duet, especially in a piano duet.
  • section — a part that is cut off or separated.
  • senecio — any plant of the genus Senecio, including groundsels, ragworts, and cineraria: family Asteraceae (composites)
  • sericon — a solution used in alchemy of unknown composition, perhaps a red tincture, often equated with minium, or red lead
  • tonetic — the phonetic study of tone in language.
  • unicode — 1.   (character)   A 16-bit character set standard, designed and maintained by the non-profit consortium Unicode Inc. Originally Unicode was designed to be universal, unique, and uniform, i.e., the code was to cover all major modern written languages (universal), each character was to have exactly one encoding (unique), and each character was to be represented by a fixed width in bits (uniform). Parallel to the development of Unicode an ISO/IEC standard was being worked on that put a large emphasis on being compatible with existing character codes such as ASCII or ISO Latin 1. To avoid having two competing 16-bit standards, in 1992 the two teams compromised to define a common character code standard, known both as Unicode and BMP. Since the merger the character codes are the same but the two standards are not identical. The ISO/IEC standard covers only coding while Unicode includes additional specifications that help implementation. Unicode is not a glyph encoding. The same character can be displayed as a variety of glyphs, depending not only on the font and style, but also on the adjacent characters. A sequence of characters can be displayed as a single glyph or a character can be displayed as a sequence of glyphs. Which will be the case, is often font dependent. See also Jörgen Bettels and F. Avery Bishop's paper Unicode: A universal character code. 2.   (language)   A pre-Fortran on the IBM 1130, similar to MATH-MATIC.
  • unvoice — to pronounce without vibration of the vocal cords
  • vection — the transference of a disease from one person to another.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?