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31-letter words containing o, r, d, i, n, e

  • a hardware programming language — (language)   (AHPL) A register-level language by Hill and Peterson, some of whose operators resemble APL. HPSIM2 is a function-level simulator, available from Engrg Expt Sta, University of Arizona.
  • actions speak louder than words — If you say that actions speak louder than words, you mean that people's actions show their real attitudes, rather than what they say. This expression is sometimes used to advise a person to do something positive.
  • advertising standards authority — an independent UK body set up by the advertising industry to ensure that all advertisements comply with the British Code of Advertising Practice
  • algebraic interpretive dialogue — (language)   (AID) A version of Joss II for the PDP-10.
  • american farm bureau federation — an organization founded in 1920 to promote the interests of farmers, especially through state and national legislation. Abbreviation: AFBF.
  • analog hardware design language — (language)   (AHDL) A language under development by the US Air Force.
  • and the rest/all the rest of it — You can add and the rest or all the rest of it to the end of a statement or list when you want to refer in a vague way to other things that are associated with the ones you have already mentioned.
  • antisocial personality disorder — psychiatric condition
  • automatic number identification — (communications)   (ANI) A service that tells the recipient of a telephone call the telephone number of the person making the call. This number can be passed to computer equipment to automatically retrieve associated information about the caller, i.e. account status, billing records, etc. See CTI.
  • be/go out of your mind with sth — If you say that someone is out of their mind with a feeling such as worry or fear, you are emphasizing that they are extremely worried or afraid.
  • borderline personality disorder — a mental condition on the dividing line between a psychiatric disorder and normality characterized by impulsiveness, extreme mood swings, and often aggressiveness
  • bose-chaudhuri-hocquenghem code — (data, communications)   (BHC Code) An error detection and correction technique based on Cyclic Redundancy Code, used in telecommunications applications.
  • burn one's bridges (behind one) — to commit oneself to a course from which there is no retreat
  • communication and network riser — (hardware, standard)   (CNR) A specification for audio, modem, USB and Local Area Networking interfaces of core computer logic chip sets. Intel introduced CNR on 2000-02-07. It was mainly developed by hardware and software developers who helped release AMR (Audio/Modem Riser) and is used by several computer manufacturers.
  • community-supported agriculture — a system by which people purchase a share from a local farm and periodically receive vegetables and other agricultural products throughout the farming season. Abbreviation: CSA.
  • computer aided test engineering — (testing, electronics)   (CATE) CASE methods applied to electronics testing and linked to CAE.
  • computer mediated communication — (messaging)   (CMC) Communication that takes place through, or is facilitated by, computers. Examples include e-mail, the web, real-time chat tools like IRC, Windows Live Messenger and video conferencing.
  • computer-aided process planning — Computer-aided process planning is a way of planning a complex manufacturing process using computers.
  • computer-aided software testing — (programming)   (CAST) Automated software testing in one or more phases of the software life-cycle.
  • constitutional democratic party — a former Russian political party that advocated a right-wing policy in foreign and domestic affairs.
  • data link connection identifier — (networking)   (DLCI) A channel number which is attached to data frames to tell a Frame Relay network how to route the data. In Frame Relay, multiple logical channels are multiplexed over a single physical channel. The DLCI says which of these logical channels a particular data frame belongs to.
  • department of homeland security — the department of the U.S. federal government charged with protecting U.S. territory from terrorist attacks and providing a coordinated response to large-scale emergencies. Abbreviation: DHS.
  • dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane — DDT.
  • director of public prosecutions — (in Britain) an official who, as head of the Crown Prosecution Service, is responsible for conducting all criminal prosecutions initiated by the police
  • dormition of the blessed virgin — the Feast of the Assumption
  • dynix automated library systems — (company)   The world's largest supplier of library automation systems with European offices in France, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands and the UK. Dynix sell two library management systems - Horizon (client/server) and, Dynix (host-based). Both have GUI or terminal interfaces. Dynix also sell other products and services for database enrichment, interconnectivity, and on-line and CD-ROM databases.
  • ear, nose and throat specialist — a medical practitioner who specializes in dealing with diseases affecting the ear, nose and throat
  • eastern diamondback rattlesnake — an extremely venomous diamondback rattlesnake, Crotalus adamanteus, of the southeastern U.S.
  • environmental health department — the department of a local authority which deals with prevention of the spread of communicable diseases, food safety and hygiene, control of infestation by insects or rodents, etc
  • european free trade association — law: free trade group
  • every cloud has a silver lining — If you say that every cloud has a silver lining, you mean that every sad or unpleasant situation has a positive side to it.
  • experiment description language — (language)   (EDL) J.S. Jenkins.
  • extended self-containing prolog — (language)   (ESP) An object-oriented extension of KL0 by Chikayama. ESP has backtracking-based control, unification-based parameter passing and object-oriented calling. An object in ESP is an axiom set. A class definition consists of nature definitions (inheritance), slot definitions (class variables) and clause definitions. ESP has multiple inheritance similar to Flavors. It has been implemented for ICOT's PSI Sequential Inference machine. See also CESP. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • federal aviation administration — FAA.
  • federal bureau of investigation — FBI.
  • foreign and commonwealth office — the department of British government which promotes the United Kingdom's interests abroad
  • frequency division multiplexing — (communications)   (FDM) The simultaneous transmission of multiple separate signals through a shared medium (such as a wire, optical fibre, or light beam) by modulating, at the transmitter, the separate signals into separable frequency bands, and adding those results linearly either before transmission or within the medium. While thus combined, all the signals may be amplified, conducted, translated in frequency and routed toward a destination as a single signal, resulting in economies which are the motivation for multiplexing. Apparatus at the receiver separates the multiplexed signals by means of frequency passing or rejecting filters, and demodulates the results individually, each in the manner appropriate for the modulation scheme used for that band or group. Bands are joined to form groups, and groups may then be joined into larger groups; this process may be considered recursively, but such technique is common only in large and sophisticated systems and is not a necessary part of FDM. Neither the transmitters nor the receivers need be close to each other; ordinary radio, television, and cable service are examples of FDM. It was once the mainstay of the long distance telephone system. The more recently developed time division multiplexing in its several forms lends itself to the handling of digital data, but the low cost and high quality of available FDM equipment, especially that intended for television signals, make it a reasonable choice for many purposes. Compare wavelength division multiplexing, time division multiplexing, code division multiplexing.
  • general services administration — an independent agency, created in 1949, that manages federal property, records, construction, etc. Abbreviation: GSA.
  • get up on the wrong side of bed — a piece of furniture upon which or within which a person sleeps, rests, or stays when not well.
  • go in one ear and out the other — the organ of hearing and equilibrium in vertebrates, in humans consisting of an external ear that gathers sound vibrations, a middle ear in which the vibrations resonate against the tympanic membrane, and a fluid-filled internal ear that maintains balance and that conducts the tympanic vibrations to the auditory nerve, which transmits them as impulses to the brain.
  • hide one's light under a bushel — something that makes things visible or affords illumination: All colors depend on light.
  • hierarchical design methodology — (programming)   (HDM) A method for specifying software and systems using hierarchies of abstract machines, developed by Larry Robinson at SRI International circa 1975-1976. The specifications were written in SPECIAL.
  • histrionic personality disorder — a psychological disorder usually beginning in early adulthood, characterized by excessive emotional expression and attention-seeking behavior. Abbreviation: HPD.
  • in the good (or bad) graces of — in favor (or disfavor) with
  • independent order of oddfellows — a secret benevolent and fraternal association founded in England in the 18th century
  • independent order of rechabites — a society devoted to total abstention from alcoholic drink
  • industrial workers of the world — an international industrial labor union, considered radical by many, that was organized in Chicago in 1905 and that disintegrated after 1920. Abbreviation: I.W.W., IWW.
  • intermediate distribution frame — (networking)   (IDF) A network closet containing a secondary hub, fed from the main hub.
  • java 2 software development kit — (language, programming)   (Java 2 SDK) Sun's tools to develop Java applications, part of the Java 2 Platform. Versions prior to 1.2 were known as the Java Development Kit (JDK).
  • link access protocol for modems — (LAPM) The Automatic Repeat Request system used in the V.42 protocol.

On this page, we collect all 31-letter words with O-R-D-I-N-E. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 31-letter word that contains in O-R-D-I-N-E to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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