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10-letter words containing o, j, c

  • projective — of or relating to projection.
  • projecture — a projection beyond the surface
  • qt-objects — A library by Michael Travers <[email protected]> and others providing an interface between MCL and QuickTime.
  • rejoice in — to be glad; take delight (often followed by in): to rejoice in another's happiness.
  • rejoiceful — to be glad; take delight (often followed by in): to rejoice in another's happiness.
  • sex object — a person viewed as being of little interest or merit beyond the potential for providing sexual gratification.
  • shock jock — a radio disc jockey or host who features offensive or controversial material.
  • subject to — under the condition that
  • subjection — the act of subjecting.
  • subproject — something that is contemplated, devised, or planned; plan; scheme.
  • surjection — onto function.
  • t-junction — T-shaped road intersection
  • toad juice — a fertilizer produced by liquidizing cane toads
  • trajection — to transport, transmit, or transpose.
  • trajectory — the curve described by a projectile, rocket, or the like in its flight.
  • unconjugal — unfaithful or not appropriate for marriage
  • union jack — a jack consisting of the union of a national flag or ensign, as the U.S. jack, which has the white stars and blue field of the union of the U.S. national flag.
  • unrejoiced — not feeling joy or delight
  • webobjects — (operating system)   Apple Computer, Inc.'s application server framework for developing dynamic web applications. WebObjects applications accept HTTP requests either directly (usually on a specific port) or via an adaptor that sits between them and the web server. Adaptors are either CGI programs or web server plug-ins (NSAPI or ISAPI). The server processes special tags in HTML pages to produce dynamic but standard HTML. Tools are provided to easily set and get object properties and invoke methods from these tags. Applications can maintain state over multiple HTTP request-response transactions (which are intrinsically stateless). Applications can also use Apple's Enterprise Object Framework object relational mapping libraries for object persistence and database access. WebObjects was originally based on Objective C and a simple scripting language but now is more likely to be used with Java. Versions are available for OS X, Windows and Unix. Apple acquired WebObjects from NeXT, along with Steve Jobs.
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