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34-letter words containing o, n, a, s, h, e

  • association of american publishers — (body, publication)   (AAP) A group engaged in standardisation efforts in document preparation.
  • automatic mathematical translation — (mathematics, tool)   (AMTRAN) A system developed by NASA in Huntsville in 1966 for the IBM 1620, based on the Culler-Fried System. It required a special terminal.
  • be charm, success, etc personified — to be very charming, successful, etc
  • between you and me and the bedpost — confidentially; in secret
  • chechen-ingush autonomous republic — an autonomous republic of the Russian Federation, in Caucasia. 7350 sq. mi. (19,300 sq. km). Capital: Grozny.
  • chief justice of the united states — the presiding judge of the U.S. Supreme Court
  • come to a head/bring sth to a head — If a problem or disagreement comes to a head or is brought to a head, it becomes so bad that something must be done about it.
  • commonwealth of independent states — a loose organization of former Soviet republics, excluding the Baltic States, formed in 1991
  • comprehensive perl archive network — (tool)   (CPAN) A collection of Internet archives containing material related to the Perl programming language.
  • dynamic systems development method — (programming)   (DSDM) An independent software development framework.
  • gorno-badakhshan autonomous region — an autonomous region in SE Tadzhikistan (Tajikistan). 25,784 sq. mi. (63,700 sq. km). Capital: Khorog.
  • have someone's blood on one's head — to be responsible for someone's death or misfortune
  • have sth down pat/have sth off pat — If you have an answer or explanation down pat or off pat, you have prepared and learned it so you are ready to say it at any time.
  • in good king charles's golden days — a ballad in which a vicar of the Stuart period changes faith to keep his living
  • kicking dead whales down the beach — (jargon, humour)   A simile for a slow, difficult, and disgusting process. First popularised by a famous quote about the difficulty of getting work done under one of IBM's mainframe OSes. "Well, you *could* write a C compiler in COBOL, but it would be like kicking dead whales down the beach."
  • nagorno-karabakh autonomous region — an administrative division in S Azerbaijan. In 1990–94 Armenian claims to the region led to violent unrest and fighting between national forces. Capital: Stepanakert. Pop: 143 000 (2000 est). Area: 4400 sq km (1700 sq miles)
  • pay a person back in the same coin — to treat a person in the same way the person treated oneself
  • perpetual motion of the first kind — motion of a hypothetical mechanism that continues indefinitely without any external source of energy. It is impossible in practice because of friction
  • present value of future cash flows — The present value of future cash flows is a method of discounting cash that you expect to receive in the future to the value at the current time.
  • programmed graph rewriting systems — (language)   (PROGRES) A very high level language based on graph grammars, developed by Andy Scheurr <[email protected]> and Albert Zuendorf <[email protected]> of RWTH, Aachen in 1991. PROGRES supports structurally object-oriented specification of attributed graph structures with multiple inheritance hierarchies and types of types (for parametric polymorphism). It also supports declarative/relational specification of derived attributes, node sets, binary relationships (directed edges) and Boolean constraints, rule-oriented/visual specification of parameterised graph rewrite rules with complex application conditions, nondeterministic and imperative programming of composite graph transformations (with built-in backtracking and cancelling arbitrary sequences of failing graph modifications). It is used for implementing abstract data types with graph-like internal structure, as a visual language for the graph-oriented database GRAS, and as a rule-oriented language for prototyping nondeterministically specified data/rule base transformations. PROGRES has a formally defined semantics based on "PROgrammed Graph Rewriting Systems". It is an almost statically typed language which additionally offers "down casting" operators for run time checked type casting/conversion (in order to avoid severe restrictions concerning the language's expressiveness). Version RWTH 5.10 includes an integrated environment.
  • put someone/something in the shade — To put someone or something in the shade means to be so impressive that the person or thing seems unimportant by comparison.
  • put that in your pipe and smoke it — accept that fact if you can
  • rumour/legend/tradition etc has it — You can use has it in expressions such as 'rumour has it that' or 'as legend has it' when you are quoting something that you have heard, but you do not necessarily think it is true.
  • rush in where angels fear to tread — If you say that someone rushes in where angels fear to tread, you are criticizing them gently because they get themselves into dangerous or difficult situations without thinking carefully enough about what they are doing.
  • securities and exchange commission — SEC.
  • shake the foundations of something — to cause great uncertainty and makes people question their most deeply held beliefs
  • southeast asia treaty organization — SEATO.
  • states of the federation of malaya — part of Malaysia, in the S Malay Peninsula, constituting Peninsular Malaysia: consists of the former Federated Malay States, the former Unfederated Malay States, and the former Straits Settlements. Capital: Kuala Lumpur. Pop: 17 144 322 (2000). Area: 131 587 sq km (50 806 sq miles)
  • supreme-court-of-the-united-states — Supreme Court of the United States.
  • synthesizer specification language — (SSL) A specification language based on term algebra and attribute grammars. SSL is used by the Synthesizer Generator, a generator for language-based editors such as the Cornell Program Synthesizer.
  • the exception that proves the rule — If you are making a general statement and you say that something is the exception that proves the rule, you mean that although it seems to contradict your statement, in most other cases your statement will be true.
  • the goose that lays the golden egg — If someone kills the goose that lays the golden egg, they harm or destroy the person or thing that gives them their money, power, or advantage.
  • there's more than one way to do it — (programming, philosophy)   (TMTOWTDI) One of the design principles of Perl. The Perl man page ends with a note: The Perl motto is "There's more than one way to do it." Divining how many more is left as an exercise to the reader.
  • to lay something at someone's door — If you lay something at someone's door, you blame them for an unpleasant event or situation.
  • to make heavy weather of something — If you say that someone is making heavy weather of a task, you are critical of them because they are doing it in an inefficient way and are making it seem more difficult than it really is.
  • to shut the door in someone's face — If someone shuts the door in your face or slams the door in your face, they refuse to talk to you or give you any information.
  • to the last detail/to the last man — You use expressions such as to the last detail and to the last man to indicate that a plan, situation, or activity includes every single person, thing, or part involved.
  • to wash your dirty linen in public — If you say that someone washes their dirty linen in public, you disapprove of their discussing or arguing about unpleasant or private things in front of other people. There are several other forms of this expression, for example wash your dirty laundry in public, or in American English, air your dirty laundry in public.
  • turn/beat swords into ploughshares — If you say that swords have been turned into ploughshares or beaten into ploughshares, you mean that a state of conflict between two or more groups of people has ended and a period of peace has begun.
  • under one roof/under the same roof — If a number of things or people are under one roof or under the same roof, they are in the same building.
  • united technologies research cente — (UTRC) http://utrcwww.utc.com/.
  • with one's tail between one's legs — the hindmost part of an animal, especially that forming a distinct, flexible appendage to the trunk.

On this page, we collect all 34-letter words with O-N-A-S-H-E. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 34-letter word that contains in O-N-A-S-H-E to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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