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13-letter words containing o, c, t, f, i

  • inns of court — (in England) the four private unincorporated societies in London that function as a law school and have the exclusive privilege of calling candidates to the English bar
  • interfunction — the kind of action or activity proper to a person, thing, or institution; the purpose for which something is designed or exists; role.
  • jellification — The process or result of jellifying.
  • jollification — jolly merrymaking; jolly festivity.
  • justification — a reason, fact, circumstance, or explanation that justifies or defends: His insulting you was ample justification for you to leave the party.
  • justificatory — serving to justify; providing justification.
  • legal fiction — an acceptance of something as true, for the sake of convenience; legal pretence
  • lignification — Turning to wood; the process of becoming ligneous.
  • liquefactions — Plural form of liquefaction.
  • liquification — Alternative form of liquefaction.
  • lithification — the process or processes by which unconsolidated materials are converted into coherent solid rock, as by compaction or cementation.
  • little office — (sometimes initial capital letters) Roman Catholic Church. an office similar to but shorter than the divine office, in honor of a saint, a mystery, or, especially, the Virgin Mary.
  • logical shift — (programming)   (Either shift left logical or shift right logical) Machine-level operations available on nearly all processors which move each bit in a word one or more bit positions in the given direction. A left shift moves the bits to more significant positions (like multiplying by two), a right shift moves them to less significant positions (like dividing by two). The comparison with multiplication and division breaks down in certain circumstances - a logical shift may discard bits that are shifted off either end of the word and does not preserve the sign of the word (positive or negative). Logical shift is approriate when treating the word as a bit string or a sequence of bit fields, whereas arithmetic shift is appropriate when treating it as a binary number. The word to be shifted is usually stored in a register, or possibly in memory.
  • loss function — (in decision theory) a function that expresses the loss incurred when a decision is made in terms of various factors.
  • magnification — the act of magnifying or the state of being magnified.
  • malfunctional — Not functioning as intended.
  • malfunctioned — Simple past tense and past participle of malfunction.
  • manufactories — Plural form of manufactory.
  • massification — the practice of making luxury products available to the mass market
  • matrifocality — The state or condition of being matrifocal; matriarchy.
  • mellification — the production of honey from nectar
  • memo function — (programming)   (Or "memoised function") A function that remembers which arguments it has been called with and the result returned and, if called with the same arguments again, returns the result from its memory rather than recalculating it. Memo functions were invented by Professor Donald Michie of Edinburgh University. The idea was further developed by Robin Popplestone in his Pop2 language long before it was ever worked into LISP. This same principle is found at the hardware level in computer architectures which use a cache to store recently accessed memory locations. A Common Lisp package by Marty Hall <[email protected]> ftp://archive.cs.umbc.edu/pub/Memoization.
  • metafictional — Of, relating to, or being metafiction.
  • metafunctions — Plural form of metafunction.
  • metrification — metrication.
  • microfelsitic — (of a rock) showing evidence of crystallization having begun, but not yet having formed any crystals
  • microfilament — a minute, narrow tubelike cell structure composed of a protein similar to actin, occurring singly and in bundles, involved in cytoplasmic movement and changes in cell shape.
  • microsoft dos — Microsoft Disk Operating System
  • microsoft iis — Internet Information Server
  • modifications — Plural form of modification.
  • mole fraction — the ratio of the number of moles of a given component of a mixture to the total number of moles of all the components.
  • mollification — to soften in feeling or temper, as a person; pacify; appease.
  • montefiascone — a town in central Italy: wine-growing area.
  • mortification — a feeling of humiliation or shame, as through some injury to one's pride or self-respect.
  • motherfucking — a mean, despicable, or vicious person.
  • multifactoral — Involving multiple factors.
  • multifunction — the kind of action or activity proper to a person, thing, or institution; the purpose for which something is designed or exists; role.
  • mummification — to make (a dead body) into a mummy, as by embalming and drying.
  • mundification — the act of cleansing a wound
  • myelofibrotic — of, relating to or affected by myelofibrosis
  • mystification — to perplex (a person) by playing upon the person's credulity; bewilder purposely.
  • mythification — to create a myth about (a person, place, tradition, etc.); cause to become a myth.
  • nectariferous — producing nectar.
  • nitrification — the act of nitrifying.
  • non-confident — having strong belief or full assurance; sure: confident of fulfillment.
  • non-defective — having a defect or flaw; faulty; imperfect: a defective machine.
  • non-inflected — to modulate (the voice).
  • nonartificial — Not artificial.
  • nonconformist — a person who refuses to conform, as to established customs, attitudes, or ideas.
  • nonconformity — failure or refusal to conform, as with established customs, attitudes, or ideas.
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