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32-letter words containing m, o, t, r

  • a number down and a number to go — If you say that there are a number of things down and a number to go, you are saying how many of the things have already been dealt with and how many remain to be dealt with.
  • administration management domain — (networking)   (ADMD) An X.400 Message Handling System public service carrier. The ADMDs in all countries worldwide together provide the X.400 backbone. Examples: MCImail and ATTmail in the U.S., British Telecom Gold400mail in the U.K. See also PRMD.
  • algorithmic test case generation — (programming)   A computational method for identifying test cases from data, logical relationships or other software requirements information.
  • applications development manager — (job)   (Or "Director") The person in a company who plans and oversees multiple projects and project managers. The Applications Development Managers works with the CIO and senior management to determine systems development strategy and standards. He or she administers department budget and reviews project managers.
  • armed (or dressed) to the teeth — as armed (or dressed up) as one can be
  • artificial insemination by donor — a form of artificial insemination in which the semen is not supplied by the woman's partner
  • automatische rechenplanfertigung — (language)   A programming language published in 1952 by Heinz Rutishauser (1918-70).
  • azimuthal equidistant projection — a projection in which the shortest distance between any point and a central point is a straight line, such a line representing a great circle through the central point.
  • chronic traumatic encephalopathy — a progressive degenerative neurological disease caused by repeated cerebral concussion or milder traumatic brain injury and characterized by memory loss, behavioral disturbances, speech problems, slowed movement, etc. The disease was first identified in boxers. Abbreviation: CTE.
  • client-server analyst programmer — (job)   A person who analyses and designs application programs for a client-server architecture. Typical skills include ODBC, Windows 95, Windows NT, Macintosh, Novell, OS/2, Unix, and RPC.
  • closed-circuit television camera — a television camera transmitting signals to receivers by cables or telephone links forming a closed circuit, as used in security systems, etc
  • come to light/bring sth to light — If something comes to light or is brought to light, it becomes obvious or is made known to a lot of people.
  • community of sovereign republics — a political and economic union formed in 1996 by Russia and Belarus
  • complex instruction set computer — (CISC) A processor where each instruction can perform several low-level operations such as memory access, arithmetic operations or address calculations. The term was coined in contrast to Reduced Instruction Set Computer. Before the first RISC processors were designed, many computer architects were trying to bridge the "semantic gap" - to design instruction sets to support high-level languages by providing "high-level" instructions such as procedure call and return, loop instructions such as "decrement and branch if non-zero" and complex addressing modes to allow data structure and array accesses to be compiled into single instructions. While these architectures achieved their aim of allowing high-level language constructs to be expressed in fewer instructions, it was observed that they did not always result in improved performance. For example, on one processor it was discovered that it was possible to improve the performance by NOT using the procedure call instruction but using a sequence of simpler instructions instead. Furthermore, the more complex the instruction set, the greater the overhead of decoding an instruction, both in execution time and silicon area. This is particularly true for processors which used microcode to decode the (macro) instruction. It is easier to debug a complex instruction set implemented in microcode than one whose decoding is "hard-wired" in silicon. Examples of CISC processors are the Motorola 680x0 family and the Intel 80186 through Intel 486 and Pentium.
  • computer emergency response team — (security, body)   (CERT) An organisation formed by DARPA in November 1988 in response to the Internet worm incident. The CERT charter is to work with the Internet community to help it responf to computer security events involving Internet hosts, to raise awareness of computer security issues and to conduct research targeted at improving the security of existing systems. CERT products and services include 24-hour technical assistance for responding to computer security incidents, product vulnerability assistance, technical documents and tutorials. E-mail: <[email protected]> (incident reports). Telephone +1 (412) 268 7090 (24-hour hotline).
  • computer generation incorporated — (company)   (CGI) A US software development company and systems integrator. E-mail: Paul G. Smith <[email protected]> Telephone: +1 (404) 705 2800 Address: Bldg. G, 4th Floor, 5775 Peachtree-Dunwoody Rd., Atlanta, GA 30342, USA.
  • conservation of angular momentum — the principle that the total angular momentum of a system has constant magnitude and direction if the system is subjected to no external force.
  • cross someone's palm with silver — a structure consisting essentially of an upright and a transverse piece, used to execute persons in ancient times.
  • crossroads care attendant scheme — (in Britain) a service providing paid attendants for disabled people who need continuous supervision
  • cumulative distribution function — a function defined on the sample space of a distribution and taking as its value at each point the probability that the random variable has that value or less. The function F(x) = P(X≤x) where X is the random variable, which is the sum or integral of the probability density function of the distribution
  • customer relationship management — the practice of building a strong relationship between a business and its customers and potential customers
  • democratic-republic-of-the-congo — People's Republic of the, a republic in central Africa, W of the Democratic Republic of the Congo: formerly an overseas territory in French Equatorial Africa; now an independent member of the French Community. 132,046 sq. mi. (341,999 sq. km). Capital: Brazzaville. Formerly French Congo, Middle Congo.
  • do one's damnedest (or damndest) — to do or try one's utmost
  • electronic funds transfer system — electronic funds transfer
  • eli compiler construction system — (tool)   A compiler generation package which integrates off-the-shelf tools and libraries with specialised language processors to generate complete compilers quickly and reliably. It simplifies the development of new special-purpose languages, implementation of existing languages on new hardware and extension of the constructs and features of existing languages. It runs on Sun-4 SunOS 4, 5, Ultrix/MIPS, RS/6000, HP-UX, SGI, Linux. Mailing list: <[email protected]>. E-mail: <[email protected]>, Developers <[email protected]>, Users <[email protected]>.
  • family health services authority — a health board
  • gentleman usher of the black rod — Black Rod (def 1).
  • get someone (or something) wrong — to fail to understand someone (or something) properly
  • get something down to a fine art — to become highly proficient at something through practice
  • go over with a fine-toothed comb — to examine very carefully and thoroughly
  • go/take/carry (sthg) to extremes — If a person goes to extremes or takes something to extremes, they do or say something in a way that people consider to be unacceptable, unreasonable, or foolish.
  • government accountability office — (in the US) a federal agency that ensures that the executive is accountable to Congress, and that the government as a whole is accountable to the country, esp in the way that taxes are spent
  • guangxi zhuang autonomous region — an administrative division in S China. 85,096 sq. mi. (220,399 sq. km). Capital: Nanning.
  • hit/come up against a brick wall — If you hit a brick wall or come up against a brick wall, you are unable to continue or make progress because something stops you.
  • information engineering facility — Advantage Gen
  • internet message access protocol — (protocol, messaging)   (IMAP) A protocol allowing a client to access and manipulate electronic mail messages on a server. It permits manipulation of remote message folders (mailboxes), in a way that is functionally equivalent to local mailboxes. IMAP includes operations for creating, deleting, and renaming mailboxes; checking for new messages; permanently removing messages; searching; and selective fetching of message attributes, texts, and portions thereof. It does not specify a means of posting mail; this function is handled by a mail transfer protocol such as SMTP. See RFC 2060, RFC 2061, and others. Compare: POP.
  • knights of st. john of jerusalem — a member of the religious and military order (Knights Hospitalers or Knights of St. John of Jerusalem) originating about the time of the first Crusade (1096–99) and taking its name from a hospital at Jerusalem.
  • linear fractional transformation — a map of the complex plane to itself in which a point z is mapped to a point w by w = (az + b)/(cz + d), where a, b, c, and d are complex numbers and ad − bc does not equal zero.
  • lymphadenopathy-associated virus — See under AIDS virus. Abbreviation: LAV.
  • lymphokine-activated killer cell — LAK cell.
  • major histocompatibility complex — MHC.
  • manager of business applications — (job)   A person who plans and oversees multiple projects and project managers. He works with the CIO and senior management to determine systems development strategy and standards. He administers the department budget and reviews project managers.
  • manufacturers' recommended price — the retail price that a manufacturer recommends for selling their product
  • microsoft data access components — (database)   (MDAC) Microsoft's umbrella term for their ActiveX Data Objects (ADO), OLE DB, and Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) libraries. Together, these provide access to a variety of data sources, both relational (SQL) and nonrelational. MDAC is the technology that supports Universal Data Access, Microsoft's strategy for providing access to information across the enterprise.
  • mount rushmore national memorialMount, a peak in the Black Hills of South Dakota that is a memorial (Mount Rushmore National Memorial) having 60-foot (18-meter) busts of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt, carved into its face between 1927 and 1941, from a design by and under the direction of Gutzon Borglum. 5600 feet (1707 meters).
  • national gas transmission system — A national gas transmission system is a system for distributing gas of a particular calorific value and safety level around a country.
  • national recovery administration — NRA.
  • network extensible window system — (NeWS) An elegant PostScript-based windowing environment, invented by James Gosling, the author of GOSMACS. NeWS would almost certainly have won the standards war with the X Window System if it hadn't been proprietary to Sun Microsystems. There is a lesson here that too many software vendors haven't yet heeded. Communication is based on PostScript and server functions can be extended. See also HyperNeWS, OpenWindows.
  • nondeterministic polynomial time — (complexity)   (NP) A set or property of computational decision problems solvable by a nondeterministic Turing Machine in a number of steps that is a polynomial function of the size of the input. The word "nondeterministic" suggests a method of generating potential solutions using some form of nondeterminism or "trial and error". This may take exponential time as long as a potential solution can be verified in polynomial time. NP is obviously a superset of P (polynomial time problems solvable by a deterministic Turing Machine in polynomial time) since a deterministic algorithm can be considered as a degenerate form of nondeterministic algorithm. The question then arises: is NP equal to P? I.e. can every problem in NP actually be solved in polynomial time? Everyone's first guess is "no", but no one has managed to prove this; and some very clever people think the answer is "yes". If a problem A is in NP and a polynomial time algorithm for A could also be used to solve problem B in polynomial time, then B is also in NP. See also Co-NP, NP-complete.
  • not have much to say for oneself — If you say that someone doesn't have much to say for himself or herself, you mean that they are not speaking very much during a conversation.

On this page, we collect all 32-letter words with M-O-T-R. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 32-letter word that contains in M-O-T-R to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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