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10-letter words containing s, e, b, c

  • subjective — existing in the mind; belonging to the thinking subject rather than to the object of thought (opposed to objective).
  • sublattice — a set of elements of a lattice, in which each subset of two elements has a least upper bound and a greatest lower bound contained in the given set.
  • sublicense — a license or contract granted to a third party by a licensee for specified rights or uses of a product, brand name, logo, etc.
  • subnascent — growing underneath
  • subnuclear — pertaining to particles within or smaller than an atomic nucleus.
  • subnucleus — a central part about which other parts are grouped or gathered; core: A few faithful friends formed the nucleus of the club.
  • suboceanic — occurring or existing below the floor of the ocean: suboceanic oil.
  • suboctuple — in the proportion or ratio of one to eight
  • subofficer — a person who holds a position of rank or authority in the army, navy, air force, or any similar organization, especially one who holds a commission.
  • subphrenic — underneath the diaphragm
  • subpotency — a condition of reduced potency, as of a medication.
  • subprefect — an administrator junior to a prefect or chief official
  • subprocess — a process that is part of a larger process
  • subproject — something that is contemplated, devised, or planned; plan; scheme.
  • subscience — a science or field of study within another field of science or study
  • subscriber — a person, company, etc., that subscribes, as to a publication or concert series.
  • subsection — a part or division of a section.
  • subsidence — to sink to a low or lower level.
  • subsociety — a subdivision of a society
  • subspecies — a subdivision of a species, especially a geographical or ecological subdivision.
  • subsurface — below the surface, especially of a body of water.
  • sugar cube — small block of sugar
  • superbitch — an exceptionally spiteful woman, a very bitchy person
  • superblock — an area of city land larger than the usual block, treated according to a unified plan and generally closed to vehicular through traffic.
  • swaybacked — having the back sagged to an unusual degree; having a sway-back.
  • switchable — a slender, flexible shoot, rod, etc., used especially in whipping or disciplining.
  • tetrabasic — (of an acid) having four atoms of hydrogen replaceable by basic atoms or groups.
  • thumbscrew — a screw, the head of which is so constructed that it may be turned easily with the thumb and a finger.
  • touch base — make contact
  • transcribe — to make a written copy, especially a typewritten copy, of (dictated material, notes taken during a lecture, or other spoken material).
  • true basic — (language)   A compiled BASIC, by John Kemeny and Thomas E. Kurtz, requiring no line numbers.
  • ubermensch — superman (def 2).
  • umb scheme — A Scheme system including an editor and debugger by William Campbell <[email protected]>. Conforms to the R4RS.
  • underscrub — small vegetation
  • unobscured — (of meaning) not clear or plain; ambiguous, vague, or uncertain: an obscure sentence in the contract.
  • unscalable — capable of being scaled: the scalable slope of a mountain.
  • unscramble — to bring out of a scrambled condition; reduce to order or intelligibility.
  • unsociable — not sociable; having, showing, or marked by a disinclination to friendly social relations; withdrawn.
  • waterbucks — Plural form of waterbuck.
  • webcasting — the broadcasting of news, entertainment, etc., using the Internet, specifically the World Wide Web.
  • webobjects — (operating system)   Apple Computer, Inc.'s application server framework for developing dynamic web applications. WebObjects applications accept HTTP requests either directly (usually on a specific port) or via an adaptor that sits between them and the web server. Adaptors are either CGI programs or web server plug-ins (NSAPI or ISAPI). The server processes special tags in HTML pages to produce dynamic but standard HTML. Tools are provided to easily set and get object properties and invoke methods from these tags. Applications can maintain state over multiple HTTP request-response transactions (which are intrinsically stateless). Applications can also use Apple's Enterprise Object Framework object relational mapping libraries for object persistence and database access. WebObjects was originally based on Objective C and a simple scripting language but now is more likely to be used with Java. Versions are available for OS X, Windows and Unix. Apple acquired WebObjects from NeXT, along with Steve Jobs.
  • whalebacks — Plural form of whaleback.
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