0%

7-letter words containing i, x, n

  • infixed — Simple past tense and past participle of infix.
  • infixes — Plural form of infix.
  • invexed — concave
  • isindex — (web)   An HTML tag which tells the browser to display a text entry box on the current page. Any text entered in the box by the user is appended as a URL-encoded query string to the current URL and sent to the server using a GET method. This is a simple way of making a website searchable or allowing other kinds of simple user input. It relies on the server mapping the query URL to an appropriate process, probably depending on the page in which the ISINDEX appeared. More complex input can be catered for using the FORM tag, or Java.
  • jiangxi — a province in SE China. 63,629 sq. mi. (164,799 sq. km). Capital: Nanchang.
  • jinxing — Present participle of jinx.
  • john ix — died a.d. 900, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 898–900.
  • john xi — died a.d. 936, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 931–936.
  • kinepox — Alternative form of kine-pox.
  • lexicon — a wordbook or dictionary, especially of Greek, Latin, or Hebrew.
  • marxian — of or relating to Karl Marx or his theories.
  • maximin — minimax
  • mexican — of or relating to Mexico or its people.
  • minimax — a strategy of game theory employed to minimize a player's maximum possible loss.
  • minxish — Like a minx.
  • mixdown — to combine (substances, elements, things, etc.) into one mass, collection, or assemblage, generally with a thorough blending of the constituents.
  • mixtion — the act of blending or amalgamating or the state of being blended or amalgamated
  • ningxia — a former province in NW China, now part of Inner Mongolia.
  • no exit — a play (1945) by Jean-Paul Sartre.
  • noxious — harmful or injurious to health or physical well-being: noxious fumes.
  • omnifax — Alternate name for NYU OMNIFAX? Early system on UNIVAC I or II. Listed in CACM 2(5):16 (May 1959).
  • outjinx — to exceed in jinxing
  • oxazine — any of a group of 13 compounds having the formula C 4 H 5 NO, the atoms of which are arranged in a six-membered ring.
  • oxidane — water; H 2 O.
  • oxidant — a chemical agent that oxidizes.
  • oxonian — of or relating to Oxford, England, or to Oxford University (in England).
  • oxyntic — of or denoting stomach cells that secrete acid
  • phoenix — a state in SW United States. 113,909 sq. mi. (295,025 sq. km). Capital: Phoenix. Abbreviation: AZ (for use with zip code), Ariz.
  • pinxter — Whitsuntide.
  • princox — a self-confident young fellow; coxcomb.
  • reindex — (in a nonfiction book, monograph, etc.) a more or less detailed alphabetical listing of names, places, and topics along with the numbers of the pages on which they are mentioned or discussed, usually included in or constituting the back matter.
  • relaxin — a polypeptide hormone produced by the corpus luteum during pregnancy that causes the pelvic ligaments and cervix to relax during pregnancy and delivery.
  • salpinx — a trumpet-shaped tube, as a Fallopian or Eustachian tube.
  • sextain — a stanza of six lines.
  • sexting — a sexually explicit digital image, text message, etc., sent to someone usually by cell phone.
  • shaanxi — a province in N central China. 75,598 sq. mi. (195,799 sq. km). Capital: Xian.
  • sin tax — a tax levied on cigarettes, liquor, gambling, or other things considered neither luxuries nor necessities.
  • six-gun — a six-shooter.
  • sixteen — a cardinal number, ten plus six.
  • sixtine — Sistine.
  • synaxis — an assembly for religious worship, especially for the celebration of the Eucharist.
  • taxiing — a taxicab.
  • taximan — a taxi driver.
  • texinfo — A GNU documentation system that uses a single source file to produce both on-line information and printed output. You can read the on-line information, known as an "Info file", with an Info documentation-reading program. By convention, Texinfo source file names end with a ".texi" or ".texinfo" extension. You can write and format Texinfo files into Info files within GNU Emacs, and read them using the Emacs Info reader. If you do not have Emacs, you can format Texinfo files into Info files using "makeinfo" and read them using "info". TeX is used to typeset Texinfo files for printing. Texinfo is available from your nearest GNU archive site.
  • texting — the main body of matter in a manuscript, book, newspaper, etc., as distinguished from notes, appendixes, headings, illustrations, etc.
  • unfixed — to render no longer fixed; unfasten; detach; loosen; free.
  • unixism — (operating system, jargon)   A piece of code or a coding technique that depends on the protected multitasking environment with relatively low process-spawn overhead that exists on virtual-memory Unix systems. Common Unixisms include: gratuitous use of "fork"; the assumption that certain undocumented but well-known features of Unix libraries such as "stdio" are supported elsewhere; reliance on obscure side-effects of system calls (use of "sleep" with a 0 argument to tell the scheduler that you're willing to give up your time-slice, for example); the assumption that freshly allocated memory is zeroed; and the assumption that fragmentation problems won't arise from never freeing memory. Compare vaxocentrism. See also New Jersey.
  • unmixed — not mixed; pure: unmixed joy.
  • untoxic — of, pertaining to, affected with, or caused by a toxin or poison: a toxic condition.
  • wanxian — a city in E Sichuan province, in S central China, on the Chang Jiang.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?