0%

4-letter words containing 3

  • 1394 — High Performance Serial Bus
  • 3270 — IBM 3270
  • 3780 — Binary Synchronous Transmission
  • 431a — (hardware)   The type of plug which fits a standard "type 600" British Telecom telephone socket.
  • 6309 — Hitachi 6309
  • 8031 — Intel 8051
  • act3 — (language)   A high-level actor language by Carl Hewitt. A descendant of Act2 which provides support for automatic generation of customers and for delegation and inheritance.
  • as31 — (tool, programming)   An 8031/8051 assembler by Ken Stauffer <[email protected]> and Theo Deraadt which produces a variety of object code output formats. The distribution includes an assembler, yacc parser, and documentation. as31 runs on Sun-3, Sun-4, SunOS 4.0, Tandy 6000, and Xenix.
  • at-3 — (language)   The original name of MATH-MATIC.
  • c386 — (tool)   A compiler for K&R C plus prototypes and other ANSI C features by Matthew Brandt, Christoph van Wuellen, Keith and Dave Walker. c386 is targetted to several 68000 and Intel 80386 assemblers, including gas. floating-point support is by inline code or emulation. It can produce lots of warnings and generates better code than ACK.
  • i386 — Intel 80386
  • ia32 — (architecture)   The processor chip architecture and instruction set used by Intel in its Pentium processors.
  • jes3 — (operating system)   One of IBM's job entry systems for MVS.
  • l33t — a coded spelling system and language used in very informal communications on the Internet, featuring letters combined with numbers or special characters in place of letters that they may resemble, and including inventive misspellings, jargon, and slang.
  • llm3 — /el el em trwa/ The assembly language for a virtual machine used as the implementation language for Le-Lisp. Developed by J. Chailloux of INRIA.
  • ltr3 — Version three of LTR, by A. Parayre of Delegation Generale pour l'Armement, France. LTR3 was widely used by the French military and avionics companies.
  • obj3 — (language)   A version of OBJ based on order-sorted rewriting. OBJ3 is agent-oriented and runs on AKCL. E-mail: <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>.
  • oc-3 — Optical Carrier 3
  • pop3 — (messaging, protocol)   Version 3 of the Post Office Protocol. POP3 is defined in RFC 1081, written in November 1988 by Marshall Rose, which is based on RFC 918 (since revised as RFC 937). POP3 allows a client computer to retrieve electronic mail from a POP3 server via a (temporary) TCP/IP or other[?] connection. It does not provide for sending mail, which is assumed to be done via SMTP or some other method. POP is useful for computers, e.g. mobile or home computers, without a permanent network connection which therefore require a "post office" (the POP server) to hold their mail until they can retrieve it. Although similar in form to the original POP proposed for the Internet community, POP3 is similar in spirit to the ideas investigated by the MZnet project at the University of California, Irvine, and is incompatible with earlier versions of POP. Substantial work was done on examining POP in a PC-based environment. This work, which resulted in additional functionality in this protocol, was performed by the ACIS Networking Systems Group at Stanford University. RFC 1082 (POP3 Extended Service) extends POP3 to deal with accessing mailboxes for mailing lists.
  • r3rs — A revision of R2RS, revised in R4RS.
  • sql3 — (database, standard, language)   A draft standard for another extension of SQL. The latest SQL3 Working Draft addresses the requirement for objects and "object identifiers" in SQL and also specifies supporting features such as encapsulation, subtypes, inheritance, and polymorphism. In the USA, SQL3 is being processed as both an ANSI Domestic ("D") project and as an ISO project. It is expected to be complete in 1998.
  • v.23 — (protocol, standard)   An ITU-T modem protocol which allowed half-duplex (unidirectional) data transmission at 1200 bits per second with a 75 bps back channel and fall back to 600/75 bps. This was the main standard used for British Telecom's Prestel service.
  • v.32 — (communications, standard)   An ITU-T standard protocol for modems transmitting at 9600 bits per second with fall back to 4800 bps. V.32bis extended this to 14400 bps. V32 and V.32bis acheive bidirectional data transmission not by having different sets of tones at each end but by subtracting what is sent from what is received.
  • v.34 — (protocol)   An ITU-T standard modem serial line protocol using symbol rates of 2400, 2743, 2800, 3000, >3200 and 3429 and up to 28800 bits per second. The official V.34 draft recommendation was titled: Modem operating at data signalling rates of up to 28 800 bit/s for use on the general switched telephone network and on leased point-to-point 2-wire telephone-type circuits. During the lengthy process of approval by ITU-T, many manufacturers released 28.8 kbps modems described as "V.FAST". The V.34 recommendation was ratified by ITU-T on 20 September 1994. Rockwell and US Robotics both have seats on the ITU-T, and have both released chip set/BIOS combinations that they feel will meet V.34. V.34 modems will also support V.FC if the manufacturer currently supports V.FC (e.g. Rockwell). Some (all?) V.34 modems will also support line probing.
  • v.35 — (communications, standard)   The ITU-T standard for data transmission at 48 kilobits per second over 60 - 108 KHz group band circuits. It contains the 34-pin V.34 connector specifications normally implemented on a modular RJ-45 connector.
  • xpg3 — Version 3 of the X/open Portability Guide.

On this page, we collect all 4-letter words with letter 3. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 4-letter word that contains 3 to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?