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11-letter words containing o, l, g, i, c

  • high colour — (hardware)   A colour depth of 16 (or 15) bits per pixel. Compare true colour.
  • high school — a school attended after elementary school or junior high school and usually consisting of grades 9 or 10 through 12.
  • highschools — Plural form of highschool.
  • holographic — Also, holographic [hol-uh-graf-ik, hoh-luh-] /ˌhɒl əˈgræf ɪk, ˌhoʊ lə-/ (Show IPA), holographical. wholly written by the person in whose name it appears: a holograph letter.
  • homological — homologous.
  • ichthyology — the branch of zoology dealing with fishes.
  • idealogical — Ideologic.
  • ideological — of or relating to ideology.
  • illogically — In an illogical manner, without following methods of sane and correct reasoning, in a manner lacking thought or logic.
  • immunologic — the branch of science dealing with the components of the immune system, immunity from disease, the immune response, and immunologic techniques of analysis.
  • incogitable — Not cogitable; inconceivable.
  • incongenial — Not congenial.
  • inoculating — to implant (a disease agent or antigen) in a person, animal, or plant to produce a disease for study or to stimulate disease resistance.
  • insectology — entomology.
  • king closer — a brick of regular length and thickness, used in building corners, having a long bevel from a point on one side to one about halfway across the adjacent end.
  • la-gioconda — Italian La Gioconda. a portrait (1503?–05?) by Leonardo da Vinci.
  • lagomorphic — Shaped like a hare.
  • langobardic — Lombard1 (def 4).
  • lichenology — the branch of biology that studies lichens.
  • lignicolous — growing or living on or in wood
  • logarithmic — pertaining to a logarithm or logarithms.
  • logic array — an arrangement of circuitry on a mass-produced microchip permitting the chip to be easily customized for a specific application.
  • logic level — the voltage level representing one or zero in an electronic logic circuit
  • logic model — A logic model is a method of calculating how likely it is that something unwanted will happen.
  • logical sum — union (def 10a).
  • logicalness — according to or agreeing with the principles of logic: a logical inference.
  • logistician — a person who is skilled in symbolic logic.
  • logocentric — a method of literary analysis in which words and language are regarded as a fundamental expression of external reality, excluding nonlinguistic factors such as historical context.
  • logographic — of, relating to, or using logograms.
  • logomachies — Plural form of logomachy.
  • logomachist — One who starts fights about the meaning of words.
  • logorrhoeic — Alternative form of logorrheic.
  • long splice — a splice for forming a united rope narrow enough to pass through a block, made by unlaying the ends of two ropes for a considerable distance, overlapping the strands so as to make pairs of one strand from each rope, unlaying one of each pair, twisting the other strand into its place in the united rope, and tucking the yarns of the unlaid strand separately into place.
  • long-acting — sustained-release.
  • longicaudal — having a long tail; macrutous.
  • low-scoring — (of a sports match) having, getting, or ending in a low score
  • medicolegal — pertaining to medicine and law or to forensic medicine.
  • megalomanic — Afflicted by megalomania.
  • meningocele — a protrusion of the meninges through an opening in the skull or spinal column, forming a bulge or sac filled with cerebrospinal fluid.
  • mesopelagic — of, relating to, or living in the ocean at a depth of between 600 feet (180 meters) and 3000 feet (900 meters).
  • microfiling — the process of reproducing the contents of a file on microfilm
  • microlights — Plural form of microlight.
  • modal logic — (logic)   An extension of propositional calculus with operators that express various "modes" of truth. Examples of modes are: necessarily A, possibly A, probably A, it has always been true that A, it is permissible that A, it is believed that A. "It is necessarily true that A" means that things being as they are, A must be true, e.g. "It is necessarily true that x=x" is TRUE while "It is necessarily true that x=y" is FALSE even though "x=y" might be TRUE. Adding modal operators [F] and [P], meaning, respectively, henceforth and hitherto leads to a "temporal logic". Flavours of modal logics include: Propositional Dynamic Logic (PDL), Propositional Linear Temporal Logic (PLTL), Linear Temporal Logic (LTL), Computational Tree Logic (CTL), Hennessy-Milner Logic, S1-S5, T. C.I. Lewis, "A Survey of Symbolic Logic", 1918, initiated the modern analysis of modality. He developed the logical systems S1-S5. JCC McKinsey used algebraic methods (Boolean algebras with operators) to prove the decidability of Lewis' S2 and S4 in 1941. Saul Kripke developed the relational semantics for modal logics (1959, 1963). Vaughan Pratt introduced dynamic logic in 1976. Amir Pnuelli proposed the use of temporal logic to formalise the behaviour of continually operating concurrent programs in 1977.
  • monological — a form of dramatic entertainment, comedic solo, or the like by a single speaker: a comedian's monologue.
  • morphologic — Of or pertaining to morphology; morphological.
  • mosaic gold — Chemistry. stannic sulfide.
  • moving coil — denoting an electromechanical device in which a suspended coil is free to move in a magnetic field. A current passing through the coil causes it to move, as in loudspeakers and electrical measuring instruments, or movement of the coil gives rise to induced currents, as in microphones and some record-player pick-ups
  • mycological — Of or pertaining to mycology.
  • mycologists — Plural form of mycologist.
  • nasological — the scientific study of noses.
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