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5-letter words containing 1

  • 1-2-3 — Lotus 1-2-3
  • 16450 — (hardware)   A UART with a one-byte FIFO buffer. The 16450 is a higher speed, fixed version of the 8250. It was superseded by the 16550. The 16450 was used for the IBM PC AT and PS/2 but will not work in a IBM PC XT.
  • 16550 — (hardware)   A version of the 16450 UART with a 16-byte FIFO. Superseded by the 16550A. This chip might not operate correctly with all software. The 16C550 is a CMOS version.
  • 16650 — (hardware)   A version of the 16550A UART with a 32-byte FIFO. Superseded by the 16750C.
  • 6.001 — (education)   /siks dub*l oh wun/, /dub*l oh wun/ or rarely /siks dub*l oh fun/ MIT's introductory computer class for majors, known for its intensity. Developed by Gerald Sussman and Hal Abelson, the course is taught in Scheme and introduces recursion, higher-order functions, object-oriented programming and much more. Students who grasp the metacircular interpreter gain entry into the Knights of the Lambda-Calculus. 6.001 has been exported to several other colleges, sometimes successfully. The textbook, "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs", written with Julie Sussman is a classic that can be found on the shelves of many computer scientists, whether they took the course or not. Legendary characters from the class, problem sets, and book include the wise Alyssa P. Hacker, Ben Bitdiddle, Lem E. Tweakit and Eva Lu Ator, the careless Louis Reasoner and Captain Abstraction.
  • 65816 — (processor)   An expanded version of the 6502, with which it is compatible. It has 16-bit index registers and stack pointer, a 16-bit direct page register and a 24-bit address bus. Used in later models of the Apple II.
  • 80186 — Intel 80186
  • 80188 — Intel 80188
  • 802.1 — IEEE 802.1
  • act 1 — Algebraic Compiler and Translator
  • asn.1 — Abstract Syntax Notation 1
  • brca1 — either of two genes (BRCA1 or BRCA2) that, if inherited in a mutated form, may predispose some carriers to develop breast or ovarian cancer.
  • cltl1 — (publication)   A report on Common LISP:
  • dod-1 — Unofficial name of the language that became Ada.
  • gim-1 — Generalized Information Management Language. Nelson, Pick, Andrews. Proc SJCC 29:169-73, AFIPS (Fall 1966).
  • h.261 — (networking, standard)   A video compression standard developed by ITU-T before 1992 to work with integrated service digital network. Data is compressed at the rate of 64P kilobits per second, where P can range from 1 to 30 depending on the number of ISDN channels used. This standard was developed primarily to support video phones and video conferencing. See also ivs.
  • hsv-1 — either of two herpes diseases caused by a herpesvirus that infects humans and some other animals and produces small, transient blisters on the skin or mucous membranes, one type of virus (herpes simplex virus type 1, or HSV-1) usually associated with oral herpes but also causing genital herpes and the other (herpes simplex virus type 2, or HSV-2) usually causing genital herpes.
  • id10t — (abuse)   /I D ten T/ A grade of user problem somewhere between PEBCAK and UBD. Considered friendlier than saying, "You called me down here to exit a modal dialog box for you?"
  • mac-1 — (language)   The assembly language used in the book cited below. See Mic-1.
  • mic-1 — Microprogramming language, used in Andrew Tanenbaum's book. See Mac-1.
  • nc-17 — a film rating meaning “no children under seventeen admitted”: it indicates that no one under the age of seventeen may be admitted to see the film
  • no. 1 — number one.
  • oc-12 — Optical Carrier 12
  • p1754 — (processor, standard)   IEEE Std 1754-1994 "A 32-Bit Microprocessor Architecture". The IEEE standard defining a version of the SPARC microprocessor architecture. The P1754 standard (the first microprocessor standard) was approved after four years on 1994-03-17. It is compatible with, but distinct from, SPARC International's 32 bit version of the SPARC Architecture, SPARC V8, from which it is largely derived. It is possible for a processor to comply with neither, one, or both specifications.
  • pg-13 — In the United States, films that are labelled PG-13 are not considered suitable for children under the age of thirteen, but parents can decide whether or not to allow their children to see the films. PG is an abbreviation for 'parental guidance'.
  • pl-11 — (language)   A high-level machine-oriented language for the PDP-11 developed by R.D. Russell of CERN in Nov 1971. It is similar to PL360 and is written in Fortran IV and cross-compiled on other machines.
  • pl516 — An ALGOL-like assembly language for the DDP-516, similar to PL360.
  • pop-1 — Package for Online Programming. Edinburgh, 1966. First of the POP family of languages. Used reverse Polish notation. Implemented as a threaded interpreter. EPU-R-17, U Edinburgh (Jul 1966). "POP-1: An Online Language", R. Popplestone, Mach Intell 2, E. Dale et al eds, Oliver and Boyd, Edinburgh 1968.
  • rj-11 — (hardware, communications)   An American-style telephone jack with six possible connections. A telephone normally uses two pairs of wires. Often found on the back of US-manufactured modems or for connection to a leased line.
  • rot13 — /rot ther'teen/ [Usenet: from "rotate alphabet 13 places"], v. The simple Caesar-cypher encryption that replaces each English letter with the one 13 places forward or back along the alphabet, so that "The butler did it!" becomes "Gur ohgyre qvq vg!" Most Usenet news reading and posting programs include a rot13 feature. It is used to enclose the text in a sealed wrapper that the reader must choose to open - e.g. for posting things that might offend some readers, or spoilers. A major advantage of rot13 over rot(N) for other N is that it is self-inverse, so the same code can be used for encoding and decoding.
  • rpl-1 — Data reduction language. Proc SJCC 30:571-575, AFIPS (Spring 1967).
  • rt-11 — (operating system)   A real time operating system for the DEC PDP-11 computers, used in the early 1980s and still in 2005 found occasionally in old embedded systems.
  • sac-1 — (mathematics, tool)   An early symbolic mathematics system, written in Fortran by G.E. Collins.
  • std 1 — (standard)   The Internet Architecture Board official list of Internet standards.
  • ten15 — (language)   A universal intermediate language, a predecessor to TDF.
  • tsl-1 — Task Sequencing Language. Language for specifying sequences of tasking events in Ada programs.
  • wa-12 — Workflow Analysis in 12 different organisations. A project from the Department of Computer Science from the University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands. The final report of this project is available to the public (ISBN 90-365-0683-2).
  • x.214 — transport layer
  • x.215 — session layer
  • x.216 — presentation layer
  • x.217 — Association Control Service Element
  • x.219 — Remote Operations Service Element
  • x11r4 — Version 11 release 4 of the X protocol. See X Window System.
  • x11r5 — Version 11 release 5 of the X protocol. Released in June 1994. See X Window System.
  • x11r6 — (operating system)   Version 11 release 6 of the X Window System.
  • x3j16 — The C++ standard technical committee.
  • x3t10 — (body)   The ATA standards body.
  • zx-81 — (computer)   An even more successful version of the Sinclair ZX-80, featuring a large uncommitted logic array instead of much discrete logic, an improved BASIC, and rather more expandability (it could take 16kb RAM packs). It was launched around 1981 and was eventually replaced by the Spectrum.

On this page, we collect all 5-letter words with letter 1. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 5-letter word that contains 1 to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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