10-letter words containing n, o, s, d
- nonstriped — Not striped.
- nonstudent — a person formally engaged in learning, especially one enrolled in a school or college; pupil: a student at Yale.
- nonsulfide — (of minerals) not containing a sulfide.
- nordhausen — a city in central Germany: site of a former Nazi concentration camp.
- normalised — normalisation
- northlands — Plural form of northland.
- northwards — Also, northwards, northwardly. toward the north.
- nose candy — cocaine.
- nose drops — medicinal drops applied via the nostrils
- nose ender — muzzler (def 2).
- nose guard — middle guard.
- nose-bleed — bleeding from the nose.
- nosebleeds — Plural form of nosebleed.
- nosediving — Present participle of nosedive.
- noseguards — Plural form of noseguard.
- notochords — Plural form of notochord.
- novell dos — (operating system, product) Novell's fully compatible alternative to MS-DOS. It is intended as an operating system for workstations on Novell networks. It features enhanced memory management that moves the operating system, network drivers, and memory-resident programs (TSRs) out of conventional memory on all systems with an Intel 80286 or later processor and extended memory or expanded memory. It supports preemptive multitasking and peer-to-peer networking using the same DOS Requester and VLMs for a "common client" with native Novell NetWare. A data compression utility effectively doubles storage capacity of the hard disk. It supports disk defragmentation, a read/write disk cache for better performance of both DOS and Microsoft Windows application programs. An undelete utility recovers erased files, even on network drives. It has a complete on-line reference guide, command help, and menu-driven install and setup utilities for easy configuration changes. Novell DOS has internal and external commands like MS-DOS. The following commands have been significantly enhanced in Novell DOS: CHKDSK, DISKCOPY, HELP, MEM, REPLACE, UNDELETE, and XCOPY. Novell DOS also includes many new commands such as XDIR, CURSOR, XDEL, TOUCH, SCRIPT, and RENDIR. Version: 7.
- nucleoside — any of the class of compounds derived by the hydrolysis of nucleic acids or nucleotides, consisting typically of deoxyribose or ribose combined with adenine, guanine, cytosine, uracil, or thymine.
- nude mouse — a virtually hairless mutant laboratory-bred mouse having a major immune system deficiency caused by a lack of T cells, and able to accept grafts of foreign tissue.
- nursehound — a species of European dogfish, Scyliorrhinus caniculus
- nystagmoid — having a similarity to or characteristics of nystagmus
- obsidional — relating to a besiegement
- occasioned — a particular time, especially as marked by certain circumstances or occurrences: They met on three occasions.
- oceanwards — Oceanward.
- odiousness — (uncountable) The condition of being odious.
- odontiasis — dentition (def 2).
- off-island — located or tending away from the shore of an island: an off-island current.
- offendress — a female person who offends
- ogden nash — John, 1752–1835, English architect and city planner.
- ogdensburg — a city in NE New York, on the St. Lawrence River.
- ohnosecond — (unit, humour) (Presumably a play on "nanosecond") The miniscule time it takes to realize that you've just made a BIG mistake like typing rm -rf * in the wrong directory. Seen in Elizabeth P. Crowe's book, "The Electronic Traveller."
- old danish — the Danish language as spoken and written from the 9th to the 14th centuries.
- on defense — engaged in an attempt to prevent an opposing team from scoring
- on deposit — payable as the first instalment, as when buying on hire-purchase
- on standby — a staunch supporter or adherent; one who can be relied upon.
- open doors — the policy of admitting people of all nationalities or ethnic groups to a country upon equal terms, as for immigration.
- open-sided — having a side or sides open.
- ordinances — Plural form of ordinance.
- ordinaries — Plural form of ordinary.
- oudtshoorn — a city in the S Cape of Good Hope province, in the S Republic of South Africa.
- outlanders — Plural form of outlander.
- outlandish — freakishly or grotesquely strange or odd, as appearance, dress, objects, ideas, or practices; bizarre: outlandish clothes; outlandish questions.
- outside in — another term for inside out
- overbounds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of overbound.
- overdesign — to prepare the preliminary sketch or the plans for (a work to be executed), especially to plan the form and structure of: to design a new bridge.
- overdosing — Present participle of overdose.
- owen sound — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada, on Georgian Bay of Lake Huron: summer resort.
- patronised — to give (a store, restaurant, hotel, etc.) one's regular patronage; trade with.
- person-day — a unit of measurement, especially in accountancy, based on an ideal amount of work done by one person in one working day.
- personhood — the state or fact of being a person.