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12-letter words containing r, o, m

  • comes around — to approach or move toward a particular person or place: Come here. Don't come any closer!
  • cometography — the scientific description and recording of comets
  • comfort food — If you call something comfort food, you mean it is enjoyable to eat and makes you feel happier, although it may not be very good for your health.
  • comfort stop — a short break on a journey to allow travellers to go to the toilet
  • comfort zone — a situation or position in which a person feels secure, comfortable, or in control
  • comfortables — Plural form of comfortable.
  • comfortingly — In a comforting manner.
  • comic relief — a comic interlude, or comic element, in a tragedy
  • commandeered — Simple past tense and past participle of commandeer.
  • commanderies — the office or rank of a commander.
  • commemorable — worthy of being commemorated
  • commemorated — Simple past tense and past participle of commemorate.
  • commemorates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commemorate.
  • commemorator — A person who commemorates something.
  • commendatory — serving to commend; expressing praise or approval
  • commensurate — If the level of one thing is commensurate with another, the first level is in proportion to the second.
  • commentarial — a series of comments, explanations, or annotations: a commentary on the Bible; news followed by a commentary.
  • commentariat — the journalists and broadcasters who analyse and comment on current affairs
  • commentaries — Plural form of commentary.
  • commentators — Plural form of commentator.
  • commercially — of, relating to, or characteristic of commerce.
  • commiserable — worthy of commiseration; pitiable
  • commiserated — Simple past tense and past participle of commiserate.
  • commiserates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commiserate.
  • commiserator — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • commissarial — Of or pertaining to a commissary.
  • commissariat — A commissariat is a military department that is in charge of food supplies.
  • commissaries — Plural form of commissary.
  • commissioner — A commissioner is an important official in a government department or other organization.
  • commodore 64 — (computer)   (C64) An 8-bit Commodore Business Machines personal computer released around September 1981. Prototypes were (apparently) made before Christmas 1980 (and shown at some computer fair). The CPU was a 6510 from MOS Technology (who were a wholly owned subsiduary of Commodore at this time(?)). The C64 had 64 kilobytes of RAM as standard and a 40-column text, 320x200 pixel display generating composite video, usually connected to a television. The C64's 1541 5.25 floppy disk drive had a 6502 processor as a disk controller. See also Commodore 65.
  • commodore 65 — (computer)   (Or Commodore 64DX, C65, C64DX) The last 8-bit computer designed by Commodore Business Machines, about 1989-1991. The C65 boasts an ugly collection of custom integrated circuits which makes even the Amiga hardware look standard. The core of the C65 chipset is the CSG 4510 and CSG 4569. The 4510 is a 65CE02 with two 6526 CIAs. The 4569 is equivalent to a combination of the 6569 VIC-II and the MMU of the Commodore 64. The C65 also has a DMA controller (Commodore's purpose built DMAgic) which also functions as a simple blitter, and a floppy controller for the internal Commodore 1581-like disk drive. The floppy controller, known as the F011, supports seven drives (though the DOS only supports 2). The 4510 supports all the C64 video modes, plus an 80 column text mode, and bitplane modes. The bitplane modes can use up to eight bitplanes, and resolutions of up to 1280 x 400. The palette is 12-bit like the Amiga 500. It also has two SID's (MOS 8580/6581) for stereo audio. The C65 has two busses, D and E, with 64 kilobytes of RAM on each. The VIC-III can access the D-bus while the CPU accesses the E-bus, and then they can swap around. This effectively makes the whole 8MB address space both chip ram and fast ram. RAM expansion is accomplished through a trap door slot in the bottom which uses a grock of a connector. The C65 has a C128-like native mode, where all of the new features are enabled, and the CPU runs at 3.5 megahertz with its pipeline enabled. It also has a C64 incompatibility mode which offers approx 50-80% compatibility with C64 software by turning off all its bells and whistles. The bells and whistles can still be accessed from the C64 mode, which is dissimilar to the C128's inescapable C64 mode. Production of the C65 was dropped only a few weeks before it moved from the Alpha stage, possibly due to Commodore's cash shortage. Commodore estimate that "between 50 and 10000" exist. There are at least three in Australia, about 30 in Germany and "some" in the USA and Canada.
  • common chord — a chord consisting of the keynote, a major or minor third, and a perfect fifth
  • common metre — a stanza form, used esp for hymns, consisting of four lines, two of eight syllables alternating with two of six
  • common ratio — geometric ratio.
  • common shrew — a small mouse-like long-snouted mammal, Sorex araneus, of the family Soricidae: order Insectivora (insectivores)
  • common zebra — Equus burchelli, the most common type of zebra
  • commorientes — people whose deaths are so close to each other (being caused by the same calamity) that it is not possible to determine who died first. It is assumed that the elder person died first
  • communicator — a person who communicates, especially one skilled at conveying information, ideas, or policy to the public.
  • commuter tax — an income tax imposed by a locality on those who work within its boundaries but reside elsewhere.
  • comparatists — Plural form of comparatist.
  • comparatives — Plural form of comparative.
  • compartition — (obsolete) The act of dividing into parts or compartments.
  • compartments — Plural form of compartment.
  • compass card — a compass in the form of a card that rotates so that "0°" or "North" points to magnetic north
  • compass rose — a circle or decorative device printed on a map or chart showing the points of the compass measured from true north and usually magnetic north
  • compaternity — the relationship between the godparents of a child or between the godparents and the child's parents.
  • compatriotic — Of or relating to compatriots.
  • compensatory — Compensatory payments involve money paid as compensation.
  • complementer — something that completes or makes perfect: A good wine is a complement to a good meal.
  • complimenter — a person who compliments
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