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11-letter words containing j, i, c

  • jackknifing — Present participle of jackknife.
  • jacklighter — a person who hunts or fishes at night with the aid of a jacklight.
  • jackpudding — An amusing person who acts foolishly in order to entertain people.
  • jackrabbits — Plural form of jackrabbit.
  • jacobinized — Simple past tense and past participle of jacobinize.
  • jactitation — Law. a false boast or claim that causes injury to another.
  • jamaica rum — a heavy, pungent, slowly fermented rum made in Jamaica.
  • jargonistic — the language, especially the vocabulary, peculiar to a particular trade, profession, or group: medical jargon.
  • jersey city — a seaport in NE New Jersey, opposite New York City.
  • jim crowism — Jim Crow (def 1).
  • job costing — a method of cost accounting by which the total cost of a given unit or quantity is determined by computing the costs that go into making a product as it moves through the manufacturing process.
  • jocoserious — Simultaneously jocular and serious; mixing mirth with serious matters.
  • joe sixpack — Slang. the average or typical blue-collar man.
  • john calvinJohn (Jean Chauvin or Caulvin) 1509–64, French theologian and reformer in Switzerland: leader in the Protestant Reformation.
  • join forces — unite for a common purpose
  • joined case — a trial combining multiple related claims, etc
  • joint stock — stock or capital divided into a number of shares.
  • judicatures — Plural form of judicature.
  • judiciaries — Plural form of judiciary.
  • judiciously — using or showing judgment as to action or practical expediency; discreet, prudent, or politic: judicious use of one's money.
  • juridically — of or relating to the administration of justice.
  • justiceable — Liable to trial in a court of justice.
  • justiceship — the office of a justice.
  • justiciable — capable of being settled by law or by the action of a court: a justiciable dispute.
  • lemon juice — citrus juice from lemons
  • life jacket — a sleeveless jacket of buoyant or inflatable construction, for supporting the wearer in deep water and preventing drowning.
  • lime-juicer — a British sailor.
  • major piece — a queen or rook.
  • microinject — to inject into a single cell or cell part.
  • nondisjunct — Not disjunct.
  • nonjudicial — Not resulting from a court ruling or judgment.
  • object lisp — (language)   An object-oriented Lisp developed by Lisp Machines Inc. (LMI) in about 1987. Object Lisp was based on nested closures and operator shadowing. Several competing object-orientated extensions to Lisp were around at the time, such as Flavors, in use by Symbolics; Common Objects, developed by Hewlett-Packard; and CommonLoops in use by Xerox. LMI submitted the specification as a candidate for an object-oriented standard for Common Lisp, but it was defeated in favour of CLOS.
  • objectified — Simple past tense and past participle of objectify.
  • objectifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of objectify.
  • objectional — Objectionable.
  • objective c — (language)   An object-oriented superset of ANSI C by Brad Cox, Productivity Products. Its additions to C are few and are mostly based on Smalltalk. Objective C is implemented as a preprocessor for C. Its syntax is a superset of standard C syntax, and its compiler accepts both C and Objective C source code (filename extension ".m"). It has no operator overloading, multiple inheritance, or class variables. It does have dynamic binding. It is used as the system programming language on the NeXT. As implemented for NEXTSTEP, the Objective C language is fully compatible with ANSI C. Objective C can also be used as an extension to C++, which lacks some of the possibilities for object-oriented design that dynamic typing and dynamic binding bring to Objective C. C++ also has features not found in Objective C. Versions exist for MS-DOS, Macintosh, VAX/VMS and Unix workstations. Language versions by Stepstone, NeXT and GNU are slightly different. There is a library of (GNU) Objective C objects by R. Andrew McCallum <[email protected]> with similar functionality to Smalltalk's Collection objects. It includes: Set, Bag, Array, LinkedList, LinkList, CircularArray, Queue, Stack, Heap, SortedArray, MappedCollector, GapArray and DelegateList. Version: Alpha Release. ftp://iesd.auc.dk/pub/ObjC/. See also: Objectionable-C.
  • objectively — something that one's efforts or actions are intended to attain or accomplish; purpose; goal; target: the objective of a military attack; the objective of a fund-raising drive.
  • objectivise — to cause to become concrete or objective; objectify.
  • objectivism — a tendency to lay stress on the objective or external elements of cognition.
  • objectivist — a tendency to lay stress on the objective or external elements of cognition.
  • objectivity — the state or quality of being objective: He tries to maintain objectivity in his judgment.
  • objectivize — to cause to become concrete or objective; objectify.
  • pn junction — the boundary between two regions in a single crystal of a semiconductor: one region contains an electron acceptor and the other an electron donor
  • prejudicant — judging beforehand
  • prejudicate — to judge beforehand
  • prejudicial — causing prejudice or disadvantage; detrimental.
  • prejudicing — any preconceived opinion or feeling, either favorable or unfavorable.
  • reinjection — an injection that follows a previous injection
  • rejectingly — in a rejecting way or manner
  • rejoicement — rejoicing; delight; exultation; gladness; joy
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