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7-letter words containing t, u, m

  • pantoum — a Malay verse form consisting of an indefinite number of quatrains with the second and fourth lines of each quatrain repeated as the first and third lines of the following one.
  • pentium — (processor)   Intel's superscalar successor to the 486. It has two 32-bit 486-type integer pipelines with dependency checking. It can execute a maximum of two instructions per cycle. It does pipelined floating-point and performs branch prediction. It has 16 kilobytes of on-chip cache, a 64-bit memory interface, 8 32-bit general-purpose registers and 8 80-bit floating-point registers. It is built from 3.1 million transistors on a 262.4 mm^2 die with ~2.3 million transistors in the core logic. Its clock rate is 66MHz, heat dissipation is 16W, integer performance is 64.5 SPECint92, floating-point performance 56.9 SPECfp92. It is called "Pentium" because it is the fifth in the 80x86 line. It would have been called the 80586 had a US court not ruled that you can't trademark a number. The successors are the Pentium Pro and Pentium II. The following Pentium variants all belong to "x86 Family 6", as reported by "Microsoft Windows" when identifying the CPU: Model Name 1 Pentium Pro 2 ? 3 Pentium II 4 ? 5, 6 Celeron or Pentium II 7 Pentium III 8 Celeron uPGA2 or Mobile Pentium III A floating-point division bug was discovered in October 1994.
  • permute — to alter; change.
  • pinetum — an arboretum of pines and coniferous trees.
  • plumate — resembling a feather, as a hair or bristle that bears smaller hairs.
  • plumcot — a hybrid tree produced by crossing the apricot and the plum.
  • plumist — a person who makes ornamental plumes
  • plummet — Also called plumb bob. a piece of lead or some other weight attached to a line, used for determining perpendicularity, for sounding, etc.; the bob of a plumb line.
  • pomatum — pomade.
  • protium — the lightest and most common isotope of hydrogen. Symbol: H 1.
  • punctum — a tip or small point
  • putamen — Botany. a hard or stony endocarp, as a peach stone.
  • puttnam — David, Baron. born 1941, British film producer. Films include Chariots of Fire (1981), The Killing Fields (1984), Memphis Belle (1990), and My Life So Far (1999)
  • pythium — a genus of parasitic oomycotes, most of which are plant parasites
  • quantum — time slice
  • rastrum — a pen for drawing the five lines of a musical stave simultaneously
  • relatum — one of the objects between which a relation is said to hold
  • remount — a fresh horse or supply of fresh horses.
  • restump — to provide (a building) with new stumps
  • romaunt — a romantic tale or poem; romance.
  • rostrum — any platform, stage, or the like, for public speaking.
  • ruptime — Unix Berkeley networking command to report the status of all hosts on the net. See also rwho. See ruptime(1N).
  • sanctum — a sacred or holy place.
  • satsuma — a Japanese pottery from Kyushu, first produced in the early 17th century and after 1800 having a crackle glaze and overglaze polychrome enameling and gilding.
  • schmutz — dirt; filth; garbage.
  • scrotum — the pouch of skin that contains the testes.
  • sfumato — the subtle and minute gradation of tone and color used to blur or veil the contours of a form in painting.
  • sistrum — an ancient Egyptian percussion instrument consisting of a looped metal frame set in a handle and fitted with loose crossbars that rattle when shaken.
  • smutchy — of or relating to smutch; dirty; grimy; soiled; smudged.
  • stadium — a sports arena, usually oval or horseshoe-shaped, with tiers of seats for spectators.
  • stambul — the oldest part and principal Turkish residential section of Istanbul, south of the Golden Horn.
  • stannum — tin.
  • statmux — statistical time division multiplexing
  • sternum — Anatomy, Zoology. a bone or series of bones extending along the middle line of the ventral portion of the body of most vertebrates, consisting in humans of a flat, narrow bone connected with the clavicles and the true ribs; breastbone.
  • stewbum — a drunken bum.
  • stibium — antimony.
  • stickum — any adhesive substance.
  • stimuli — something that incites to action or exertion or quickens action, feeling, thought, etc.: The approval of others is a potent stimulus.
  • stomium — the part of the sporangium of ferns that ruptures to release the spores
  • stratum — a layer of material, naturally or artificially formed, often one of a number of parallel layers one upon another: a stratum of ancient foundations.
  • stumble — to strike the foot against something, as in walking or running, so as to stagger or fall; trip.
  • stumbly — tending to stumble
  • stummel — the bowl of a (smoking) pipe
  • stumped — the lower end of a tree or plant left after the main part falls or is cut off; a standing tree trunk from which the upper part and branches have been removed.
  • stumper — a person or thing that stumps.
  • sturmer — a variety of eating apple having a pale green skin and crisp tart flesh
  • subatom — any component of an atom.
  • subitem — a separate article or particular: 50 items on the list.
  • suimate — self-mate.
  • sumatra — a large island in the W part of Indonesia. 164,147 sq. mi. (425,141 sq. km).
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