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11-letter words containing t, i, o, u

  • monologuist — a form of dramatic entertainment, comedic solo, or the like by a single speaker: a comedian's monologue.
  • montesquieu — (Charles Louis de Secondat, Baron de la Brède et de Montesquieu) 1689–1755, French philosophical writer.
  • monticolous — existing or having a habitat in or on mountains
  • monticulate — having low rising mounds or protrusions
  • moratoriums — Plural form of moratorium.
  • moribundity — in a dying state; near death.
  • mortiferous — deadly; fatal.
  • mosquitoing — Present participle of mosquito.
  • mossbluiter — the bittern
  • most-jutish — a member of a continental Germanic tribe, probably from Jutland, that invaded Britain in the 5th century a.d. and settled in Kent.
  • most-lupine — pertaining to or resembling the wolf.
  • mount sinai — the mountain where Moses received the Law from God (Exodus 19–20): often identified as Jebel Musa, sometimes as Jebel Serbal, both on the S Sinai Peninsula
  • mount siple — a mountain in Antarctica, on the coast of Byrd Land. Height: 3100 m (10 171 ft)
  • mountaineer — A person who takes part in mountaineering.
  • mountainous — (of a region) having many mountains.
  • mountaintop — The summit or top part of a mountain.
  • moustachial — (of a stripe on a beak or snout of an animal) resembling a moustache
  • mouthpieces — Plural form of mouthpiece.
  • moxibustion — (in Eastern medicine) the burning of moxa on or near a person’s skin as a counterirritant.
  • mu-neutrino — muon-neutrino.
  • mucopeptide — Peptidoglycan.
  • mucoprotein — a protein that yields carbohydrates as well as amino acids on hydrolysis.
  • multanimous — having many sides
  • multi-nodal — pertaining to or of the nature of a node.
  • multiauthor — having numerous or many authors
  • multicarbon — having several carbon atoms
  • multichoice — Multiple-choice.
  • multichrome — chromium.
  • multicoated — having more than one coating of a substance
  • multicolour — (chiefly, British, and, Canada) alternative spelling of multicolor.
  • multicolumn — having or relating to several columns
  • multicounty — involving or relating to several counties
  • multicourse — a direction or route taken or to be taken.
  • multidomain — of, relating to, or affecting several domains
  • multifactor — Of or pertaining to more than one factor.
  • multifloral — Of or relating to more than one (variety of) flower.
  • multifocals — multifocal spectacles
  • multiformat — Accessible in more than one format.
  • multijugous — having several pairs, especially pairs of leaflets; multijugate
  • multilobate — having or comprised of several lobes
  • multination — Of or pertaining to more than one nation.
  • multinomial — polynomial (def 2c).
  • multiparous — of or relating to a multipara.
  • multiperiod — Relating to multiple periods.
  • multiperson — a human being, whether an adult or child: The table seats four persons.
  • multiphoton — involving several photons
  • multipiston — having more than one piston
  • multiplexor — multiplexing
  • multipop-68 — (operating system)   An early time-sharing operating system developed in Edinburgh by Robin Popplestone and others. It was inspired by MIT' Project MAC, via a "MiniMac" project which was aborted when it became obvious that Elliot Brothers Ltd. could not supply the necessary disk storage. Multipop was highly efficient in its use of machine resources to support symbolic programming, and effective - e.g. in supporting the development of the Boyer-Moore theorem prover and of Burstall and Darlington's transformation work. It was not good at supporting the user programs which were then the standard fare of computing, e.g. matrix inversion. This arose from the fact that while the POP-2 compiler generated good code for function call (which is a lot of what layered systems like operating systems do) it did not generate efficient code for arithmetic or store access, because there was no way to police the generation of illegal objects statically. (Hindley-Milner type checking did not exist). Indeed, since many OS features like file-access were performed by function-call (of a closure) rather than an OS call requiring a context switch, POP-2 actually gained performance. Multipop68 was efficient primarily because the one language, POP-2 served all purposes: it was the command language for the operating system as well as being the only available programming language. Thus there was no need to swap in compilers etc. All store management was accomplished uniformly by the garbage collector, as opposed to having store management for the OS and store management for each application. There was a substantial amount of assembly language in Multipop68. This was primarily for interrupt handling, and it is difficult to handle this without a real-time garbage-collector.
  • multipotent — having power to produce or influence several effects or results.
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