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6-letter words containing p, o, c

  • incorp — incorporated
  • kopeck — an aluminum-bronze coin of Russia, the Soviet Union, and its successor states, the 100th part of a ruble.
  • lipoic — Of or pertaining to lipoic acid and its derivatives, the lipoates.
  • lockup — a jail, especially a local one for temporary detention.
  • lompoc — a city in SW California.
  • mobcap — a soft cloth cap with a full crown, fitting down over the ears and frequently tying beneath the chin, formerly worn indoors by women.
  • mockup — a contemptuous or derisive imitative action or speech; mockery or derision.
  • myopic — Ophthalmology. pertaining to or having myopia; nearsighted.
  • occupy — to take or fill up (space, time, etc.): I occupied my evenings reading novels.
  • octopi — any octopod of the genus Octopus, having a soft, oval body and eight sucker-bearing arms, living mostly at the bottom of the sea.
  • oilcup — a closed cup or can supplying lubricant to a bearing or bearings.
  • opacus — (of a cloud) dense enough to obscure the sun or moon.
  • opcode — (computing) A mnemonic used to refer to a microprocessor instruction in assembly language.
  • optics — the eye.
  • orphic — of or relating to Orpheus.
  • p-code — (language)   The intermediate language produced by the Pascal-P compiler. P-code is the assembly language for a hypothetical stack machine, the P-machine, said to imitate the instruction set of the Burroughs 6700. The term was first used in the Wirth reference below. Byte articles on writing a Pascal Compiler in Northstar BASIC (ca Aug 1978) also used the term. P-code was initially the intermediate code generated by the P2 compiler from ETH Zurich. P-code was later used as the intermediate language in the UCSD Pascal System, and in its two main derivatives, Apple Pascal and the UCSD P-system. Variants: P2 P-code, P4 P-code, UCSD P-code, LASL P-code.
  • pacino — Al, full name Alfredo James Pacino. born 1940, US film actor; his films include The Godfather (1972), Dog Day Afternoon (1975), Scent of a Woman (1992), for which he won an Oscar, and Insomnia (2002)
  • panuco — a river in E central Mexico, flowing E to the Gulf of Mexico. About 315 miles (505 km) long.
  • paochi — a city in W Shaanxi province, in central China.
  • phobic — of or relating to a phobia or phobias.
  • phocis — an ancient district in central Greece, N of the Gulf of Corinth: site of Delphic oracle.
  • phocus — An object-oriented Prolog-like language.
  • phonic — of or relating to speech sounds.
  • photic — of or relating to light.
  • phyco- — seaweed
  • picaro — a rogue or vagabond.
  • picong — any teasing or satirical banter, originally a verbal duel in song
  • picote — ornamented or embroidered with picots
  • picro- — bitter
  • pictor — a faint constellation in the S hemisphere lying between Dorado and Carina
  • pionic — relating to or involving a pion
  • poachy — (of land) slushy; swampy.
  • pochay — to transport by post-chaise
  • pocked — marked with pustules or with pits left by them; pitted.
  • pocket — a shaped piece of fabric attached inside or outside a garment and forming a pouch used especially for carrying small articles.
  • poetic — possessing the qualities or charm of poetry: poetic descriptions of nature.
  • polack — Slang: Extremely Disparaging and Offensive. a contemptuous term used to refer to a Pole or person of Polish descent.
  • police — Also called police force. an organized civil force for maintaining order, preventing and detecting crime, and enforcing the laws.
  • policy — a definite course of action adopted for the sake of expediency, facility, etc.: We have a new company policy.
  • pomace — the pulpy residue from apples or similar fruit after crushing and pressing, as in cider making.
  • poncey — If you say that someone or something is poncey, you mean you do not like them because they are too feminine or artistic.
  • poncho — a blanketlike cloak with a hole in the center to admit the head, originating in South America, now often worn as a raincoat.
  • pontic — an artificial tooth in a bridge.
  • poonac — a coconut residue, mainly used as animal fodder
  • poonce — a male homosexual
  • potche — to thrust, pierce, or stab
  • pouchy — possessing or resembling a pouch: pouchy folds under the eyes.
  • pounce — to swoop down suddenly and grasp, as a bird does in seizing its prey.
  • procne — a princess of Athens, who punished her husband for raping her sister Philomela by feeding him the flesh of their son. She was changed at her death into a swallow
  • procol — (language)   A parallel object language with protocols, constraints and distributed delegation by J. Van Den Bos of Erasmus University, Rotterdam.
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