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8-letter words containing x, t

  • extremal — (mathematics) Having to do with extrema.
  • extremer — Comparative form of extreme.
  • extremes — Plural form of extreme.
  • extremum — The maximum or minimum value of a function.
  • extrorse — Turned outward.
  • extruded — Simple past tense and past participle of extrude.
  • extruder — A machine that extrudes material through shaped dies.
  • extrudes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of extrude.
  • extubate — (surgery) To remove a tube from a hollow organ or from an airway.
  • exudates — Plural form of exudate.
  • exultant — Triumphantly happy.
  • exulting — Present participle of exult.
  • exuviate — (ambitransitive, rare) To shed or cast off a covering, especially a skin; to slough; to molt (moult).
  • fixating — Present participle of fixate.
  • fixation — the act of fixing or the state of being fixed.
  • fixative — serving to fix; making fixed or permanent.
  • fixators — Plural form of fixator.
  • fixature — anything that holds an object in place, whether by physical or chemical means
  • fixities — Plural form of fixity.
  • fixpoint — fixed point
  • fixtured — Simple past tense and past participle of fixture.
  • fixtures — something securely, and usually permanently, attached or appended, as to a house, apartment building, etc.: a light fixture; kitchen fixtures.
  • flat tax — set rate of tax
  • flax kit — a basket woven from flax fibres
  • flextime — a system of working that allows an employee to choose, within limits, the hours for starting and leaving work each day.
  • fluxgate — (physics) Any of several devices that use soft iron cores surrounded by coils of wire that generate a pattern of induced currents when it moves relative to an external magnetic field.
  • fluxuate — Misspelling of fluctuate.
  • fort dix — a military reservation and U.S. Army training center in S central New Jersey, NNE of Mount Holly.
  • fox bolt — an anchor bolt secured by a foxtail wedge forced into its end as it is screwed into a blind hole.
  • fox hunt — the hunting of foxes with hounds
  • fox moth — a coppery-brown European eggar moth, Macrothylacia rubi, whose black-and-yellow woolly larvae are commonly found on heather and bramble
  • fox trot — a slow gait in which a horse moves its forelegs in a trot and its hind legs in a long-striding pace
  • fox-trot — to dance a fox trot.
  • foxtails — Plural form of foxtail.
  • genetrix — a female progenitor
  • geotaxis — oriented movement of a motile organism toward or away from a gravitational force.
  • gift tax — a tax imposed on the transfer of money or property from one living person to another by gift, payable by the donor.
  • gore-tex — a type of synthetic fabric which is waterproof yet allows the wearer's skin to breathe; used for sportswear
  • hanotaux — (Albert Auguste) Gabriel [al-ber oh-gyst ga-bree-el] /alˈbɛr oʊˈgüst ga briˈɛl/ (Show IPA), 1853–1944, French statesman and historian.
  • hatboxes — Plural form of hatbox.
  • head tax — a uniform tax or surcharge imposed upon every person or every adult in a specific group, as on those entering or leaving a country or using a particular service or conveyance.
  • heretrix — a female inheritor, heiress
  • hexaglot — a book written in six languages
  • hexeract — (mathematics) A six-dimensional hypercube.
  • hoaxster — Alternative form of hoaxer (rare).
  • hunt box — a hunting lodge or house near or in a hunting area for use during the hunting season.
  • i expect — You say 'I expect' to suggest that a statement is probably correct, or a natural consequence of the present situation, although you have no definite knowledge.
  • inexpert — not expert; unskilled.
  • inteldx4 — (processor)   Essentially an Intel 486DX microprocessor with a 16 kilobyte on-chip cache. The DX4 is the fastest member of the Intel 486 family. 75 and 100MHz versions are available. At an iCOMP index rating of 435, the 100 MHz DX4 performs up to 50% faster than the 66 MHz Intel DX2. The DX4's clock multiplier allows the processor to run three times faster than the system clock. This performance is achieved in part by a 16K on-chip cache (double that of the other 486s). The DX4 has an integrated floating point unit. Like the other 486s, the DX4 achieves performance through a RISC integer core that executes frequently used instructions in a single clock cycle (the Pentium's can execute multiple instructions in a single clock cycle). Low power consumption has been achieved with SL Technology and a 0.6 micron manufacturing process, giving 1.6 million transistors on a single chip operating at only 3.3 Volts. "IntelDX4" is the entire name, the "486" has been dropped and I am assured that there is no space in the same.
  • intermix — Mix together.
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