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9-letter words containing z, o, i

  • sodomized — to subject to sodomy; commit sodomy upon.
  • sodomizes — to subject to sodomy; commit sodomy upon.
  • solemnize — to perform the ceremony of (marriage).
  • solutizer — any admixture to a substance for promoting or increasing its solubility or that of one or more of its components.
  • sonnetize — to write sonnets.
  • sorbitize — to turn metal into a form containing sorbite
  • sovietize — (sometimes lowercase) to bring under the influence or domination of the Soviet Union.
  • spinozism — the philosophical system of Spinoza, which defines God as the unique substance, as an impersonal deity, and as possessing an infinite number of attributes, of which we know only thought and extension, and an infinite number of modes, each modifying all of the attributes, these attributes and modes being regarded both as proceeding necessarily from the nature of God and as constituents of God.
  • stylopize — (of a stylops) to parasitize (a host)
  • syllogize — to reason or infer by using syllogisms
  • symbolize — to be a symbol of; stand for or represent in the manner of a symbol.
  • synoecize — (in ancient Greece) to unite under one capital city
  • synopsize — to make a synopsis of; summarize.
  • syntonize — to render syntonic; tune to the same frequency.
  • temporize — to be indecisive or evasive to gain time or delay acting.
  • terrorize — to fill or overcome with terror.
  • teutonize — to make or become German or Germanic; Germanize
  • thorazine — chlorpromazine
  • time zone — one of the 24 regions or divisions of the globe approximately coinciding with meridians at successive hours from the observatory at Greenwich, England.
  • torrenize — to register (property) under a Torrens law
  • totalizer — a person or thing that totals.
  • trapezoid — Geometry. a quadrilateral plane figure having two parallel and two nonparallel sides. British. trapezium (def 1b).
  • trebizond — a medieval empire in NE Asia Minor 1204–1461.
  • uniodized — to treat, impregnate, or affect with iodine or an iodide.
  • unionized — to form into a union.
  • unionizer — someone who organizes workers into a trade union or trade unions
  • vaporizer — a person or thing that vaporizes.
  • vectorize — (of computing graphics) to convert from a bitmap representation to a vector representation
  • venizelos — Eleutherios [e-lef-the-ryaws] /ˌɛ lɛfˈθɛ ryɔs/ (Show IPA), 1864–1936, prime minister of Greece 1910–15, 1917–20, 1928–33.
  • volcanize — to affect or alter by volcanic heat or action.
  • volumizer — a product that gives extra body to the hair
  • wantonize — to make (something) wanton
  • waterzooi — A type of Flemish stew, traditionally made with fish.
  • weaponize — to supply or equip with a weapon or weapons: to weaponize trucks and helicopters.
  • winsorize — (statistics) To transform statistics of a batch or sample by transforming extreme values.
  • womanized — to make effeminate.
  • womanizer — a philanderer.
  • womanizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of womanize.
  • wooziness — stupidly confused; muddled: woozy from a blow on the head.
  • yousafzai — Malala (məˈlælə) born 1997, Pakistani women's rights campaigner; survived an attack by a Taliban gunman (2012); Nobel Peace Prize (2014)
  • zákinthos — one of the southernmost islands of the Ionian Islands, Greece: 155 sq mi (401 sq km)
  • zelotypia — (formal) jealousy.
  • zillionth — (informal) The ordinal form of the number 'zillion'.
  • zilog z80 — (processor)   An 8-bit microprocessor. It was released in July 1976 with a 2.5 MHz clock rate. The Z80 was a much improved Intel 8080 (as was the Intel 8085). It also used 8-bit data and 16-bit addressing, and could execute all of the 8080 op codes as well as 80 new ones, instructions that included 1, 4, 8 and 16-bit operations and even block move and block I/O instructions. The register set was doubled, with two banks of registers (including A and F) that could be switched between. This allowed fast operating system or interrupt context switches. It features 3 types of interrupt mode. The Z80 also added two index registers (IX and IY) and relocatable vectored interrupts (via the 8-bit IV register). Like many processors (including the 8085), the Z80 featured many undocumented op codes. Chip area near the edge was used for added instructions, but fabrication made the failure of these high. Instructions that often failed were just not documented, increasing chip yield. Later fabrication made these more reliable. The thing that really made the Z80 popular was the memory interface - the CPU generated it's own RAM refresh signals, which meant easier design and lower system cost. That and its 8080 compatibility and CP/M, the first standard microprocessor operating system, made it the first choice of many systems. In addition to the original Z80 (2.5 MHz) there are the Zilog Z80A (4 MHz), Zilog Z80B (6MHz) and Zilog Z80H (8 MHz) versions. The popular Hitachi HD64180 processor family adds peripherals and an MMU to the Z80. The Zilog Z280 was an enhanced version with an MMU and many new op codes. The Z80 was used in the first Nintendo Game Boy. A Sharp Z80 work-alike was used in the GameBoy Color, running at 4 MHz for GameBoy software or at 8 MHz for Game Boy Color software. The Z80 was used in the Sega Master System and the Game Gear. It was also used in the Sega Genesis for hardware reverse compatibility with the Sega Master System through a special cartridge.
  • zircalloy — an alloy of zirconium containing small amounts of tin, chromium, and nickel. It is used in pressurized-water reactors
  • zirconian — (mineralogy) Describing minerals containing zirconium.
  • zirconite — (mineralogy) A light brown variety of zircon.
  • zirconium — a metallic element found combined in zircon, baddeleyite, etc., resembling titanium chemically: used in steel metallurgy, as a scavenger, as a refractory, and as an opacifier in vitreous enamels. Symbol: Zr; atomic weight: 91.22; atomic number: 40; specific gravity: 6.49 at 20°C.
  • zoetropic — of or relating to a zoetrope
  • zoiatrics — the science of veterinary surgery
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