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5-letter words containing 8

  • 386sx — Intel 80386SX
  • 486dx — Intel 486
  • 486sx — Intel 486SX
  • 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.
  • 68000 — Motorola 68000
  • 68020 — Motorola 68020
  • 68030 — Motorola 68030
  • 68040 — Motorola 68040
  • 68050 — Motorola 68050
  • 68060 — Motorola 68060
  • 680x0 — Motorola 680x0
  • 80186 — Intel 80186
  • 80188 — Intel 80188
  • 802.1 — IEEE 802.1
  • 802.2 — IEEE 802.2
  • 802.3 — IEEE 802.3
  • 80286 — Intel 80286
  • 80386 — Intel 80386
  • 80486 — Intel 486
  • 80x86 — Intel 80x86
  • 88000 — Motorola 88000
  • cul8r — see you later
  • din-8 — (hardware)   An 8-pin round connector, sometimes used for EIA-232 serial communication when space is restricted, such as on laptop computers.
  • fx-87 — Effects. A polymorphic language based on Scheme, allowing side effects and first-class functions. It attempts to integrate functional and imperative programming. Expressions have types, side effects (e.g. reading, writing or allocating) and regions (stating where the effects may occur). Versions: FX-89, FX-90.
  • gif89 — Graphics Interchange Format
  • oc-48 — Optical Carrier 48
  • ops83 — A commercial version of OPS5.
  • u-238 — the radioactive uranium isotope having a mass number 238, comprising 99.28 percent of natural uranium: used chiefly in nuclear reactors as a source of the fissionable isotope plutonium 239.
  • utf-8 — (character)   (UCS transformation format 8) An ASCII-compatible multibyte Unicode and UCS encoding, used by Java and Plan 9. The Unicode character set occupies a 16-bit code space. The most obvious Unicode encoding (known as UCS-2) consists of a sequence of 16-bit words. Such strings can contain bytes like '\0' or '/' which have a special meaning in filenames and other C library function parameters. In addition, the majority of Unix tools expects ASCII files and can't read 16-bit words as characters without major modifications. For these reasons, UCS-2 is not a suitable external encoding of Unicode in filenames, text files, environment variables, etc. The ISO 10646 Universal Character Set (UCS), a superset of Unicode, occupies a 31-bit code space and the obvious UCS-4 encoding for it (a sequence of 32-bit words) has the same problems. The UTF-8 encoding of Unicode and UCS avoids the problems of fixed-length Unicode encodings because an ASCII file encoded in UTF is exactly same as the original ASCII file and all non-ASCII characters are guaranteed to have the most significant bit set (bit 0x80). This means that normal tools for text searching etc. work as expected. UTF-8 is defined in RFC 2279.
  • x.208 — Abstract Syntax Notation 1
  • x.680 — (standard)  
  • z8000 — Zilog Z8000
  • zx-80 — (computer)   Sinclair's cheap personal computer with built-in BASIC, launched at the end of January 1980 at a computer fair in Wembley, UK. The processor was an NEC 780-C running at 3.25 MHz. It had 1KB of RAM, externally expandable to 16KB, and 4KB of ROM. It had RF video output to a TV, displaying 24 lines by 32 characters of monochrome text. An audio cassette recorder was used to save programs. The ZX-80 was sold in kit form for £79.95 or ready-built for £99.95. It was used by many UK hobbyists as a means of learning the basics of computing. Some remember the 1KB ZX-80 for the claim in its advertising that you could control a nuclear power station with it. The ZX-80 was succeeded by the ZX-81.
  • 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 8. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 5-letter word that contains 8 to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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