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11-letter words containing mo

  • commemorate — To commemorate an important event or person means to remember them by means of a special action, ceremony, or specially-created object.
  • commodified — to turn into a commodity; make commercial.
  • commodifies — to turn into a commodity; make commercial.
  • commodities — an article of trade or commerce, especially a product as distinguished from a service.
  • commoditise — To transform into a commodity.
  • commoditize — to turn into a commodity; make commercial.
  • common cold — The common cold is a mild illness. If you have it, your nose is blocked or runny and you have a sore throat or a cough.
  • common core — the most important subjects of the curriculum
  • common cost — costs assignable to two or more products, operations, departments, etc., of a company.
  • common crab — an edible crustacean, Cancer pagurusan
  • common good — the part of the property of a Scottish burgh, in the form of land or funds, that is at the disposal of the community
  • common gull — a type of gull, Larus canus
  • common land — Common land is land which everyone is allowed to use.
  • common lisp — (language)   A dialect of Lisp defined by a consortium of companies brought together in 1981 by the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Companies included Symbolics, Lisp Machines, Inc., Digital Equipment Corporation, Bell Labs., Xerox, Hewlett-Packard, Lawrence Livermore Labs., Carnegie-Mellon University, Stanford University, Yale, MIT and USC Berkeley. Common Lisp is lexically scoped by default but can be dynamically scoped. Common Lisp is a large and complex language, fairly close to a superset of MacLisp. It features lexical binding, data structures using defstruct and setf, closures, multiple values, types using declare and a variety of numerical types. Function calls allow "&optional", keyword and "&rest" arguments. Generic sequence can either be a list or an array. It provides formatted printing using escape characters. Common LISP now includes CLOS, an extended LOOP macro, condition system, pretty printing and logical pathnames. Implementations include AKCL, CCL, CLiCC, CLISP, CLX, CMU Common Lisp, DCL, KCL, MCL and WCL. Mailing list: <[email protected]>.
  • common nail — a cut or wire nail having a slender shaft and a broad, flat head.
  • common name — a noun that may be preceded by an article or other limiting modifier and that denotes any or all of a class of entities and not an individual, as man, city, horse, music.
  • common noun — A common noun is a noun such as 'tree', 'water', or 'beauty' that is not the name of one particular person or thing. Compare proper noun.
  • common room — A common room is a room in a university or school where people can sit, talk, and relax.
  • common salt — salt1 (def 1).
  • common seal — the official seal of a corporate body
  • common teal — a small Eurasian duck, Anas crecca, that is related to the mallard and frequents ponds, lakes, and marshes
  • common tern — any of numerous aquatic birds of the subfamily Sterninae of the family Laridae, related to the gulls but usually having a more slender body and bill, smaller feet, a long, deeply forked tail, and a more graceful flight, especially those of the genus Sterna, as S. hirundo (common tern) of Eurasia and America, having white, black, and gray plumage.
  • common time — a time signature indicating four crotchet beats to the bar; four-four time
  • common toad — an amphibian of the class Bufonidae, Bufo bufo of Europe
  • common year — an ordinary year of 365 days; a year having no intercalary period.
  • commonality — Commonality is used to refer to a feature or purpose that is shared by two or more people or things.
  • commonition — (obsolete) advice; warning; instruction.
  • commonloops — (language)   Xerox's object-oriented Lisp which led to CLOS. See also Portable CommonLoops.
  • commonplace — If something is commonplace, it happens often or is often found, and is therefore not surprising.
  • commonsense — sound practical judgment that is independent of specialized knowledge, training, or the like; normal native intelligence.
  • commotional — violent or tumultuous motion; agitation; noisy disturbance: What's all the commotion in the hallway?
  • comorbidity — the occurrence of more than one illness or condition at the same time
  • cooked mode — The normalUnix character-input mode, with interrupts enabled and with erase, kill and other special-character interpretations performed directly by the tty driver. Opposite of raw mode. See also rare mode. Other operating systems often have similar mode distinctions, and the raw/rare/cooked way of describing them has spread widely along with the C language and other Unix exports. Most generally, "cooked mode" may refer to any mode of a system that does extensive preprocessing before presenting data to a program.
  • copy module — copybook
  • core memory — core storage
  • cosmocratic — of or relating to a cosmocrat
  • cosmodromes — Plural form of cosmodrome.
  • cosmogonies — Plural form of cosmogony.
  • cosmogonist — A person who studies cosmogony.
  • cosmography — a representation of the world or the universe
  • cosmologies — Plural form of cosmology.
  • cosmologist — A person who studies cosmology.
  • cosmonautic — Of or related to cosmonauts or cosmonautics.
  • cosmopolite — an animal or plant that occurs in most parts of the world
  • cosmosphere — a device consisting of a glass globe on which the stars are shown, and within which is another globe representing the Earth, that shows the position of the Earth, at any given time, in relation to the stars
  • cosmothetic — positing the existence of the external world
  • cottonmouth — water moccasin
  • countermemo — a memorandum responding to another memorandum
  • countermove — A countermove is an action that someone takes in response to an action by another person or group.
  • covermounts — Plural form of covermount.
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