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6-letter words containing od

  • oddity — an odd or remarkably unusual person, thing, or event.
  • odelet — A little or short ode.
  • odense — a seaport on Fyn island, in S Denmark.
  • odessa — a seaport in S Ukraine, on the Black Sea.
  • odetta — (Odetta Holmes) 1930–2008, U.S. folk singer.
  • odette — a female given name.
  • odious — deserving or causing hatred; hateful; detestable.
  • odisha — a state in E India. 60,136 sq. mi. (155,752 sq. km). Capital: Bhubaneshwar.
  • odored — Simple past tense and past participle of odor.
  • odours — Plural form of odour.
  • odylic — od.
  • omigod — an exclamation of surprise, pleasure, dismay, etc
  • oodles — a large quantity: oodles of love; oodles of money.
  • opcode — (computing) A mnemonic used to refer to a microprocessor instruction in assembly language.
  • osgood — a male given name.
  • p-code — (language)   The intermediate language produced by the Pascal-P compiler. P-code is the assembly language for a hypothetical stack machine, the P-machine, said to imitate the instruction set of the Burroughs 6700. The term was first used in the Wirth reference below. Byte articles on writing a Pascal Compiler in Northstar BASIC (ca Aug 1978) also used the term. P-code was initially the intermediate code generated by the P2 compiler from ETH Zurich. P-code was later used as the intermediate language in the UCSD Pascal System, and in its two main derivatives, Apple Pascal and the UCSD P-system. Variants: P2 P-code, P4 P-code, UCSD P-code, LASL P-code.
  • pagoda — (in India, Burma, China, etc.) a temple or sacred building, usually a pyramidlike tower and typically having upward-curving roofs over the individual stories.
  • parmod — "Parallel Programming with ParMod", S. Eichholz, Proc 1987 Intl Conf on Parallel Proc, pp.377-380.
  • parody — a humorous or satirical imitation of a serious piece of literature or writing: his hilarious parody of Hamlet's soliloquy.
  • peapod — the part of a pea plant that surrounds the growing peas
  • period — a rather large interval of time that is meaningful in the life of a person, in history, etc., because of its particular characteristics: a period of illness; a period of great profitability for a company; a period of social unrest in Germany.
  • pernod — an aniseed-flavoured apéritif from France
  • plodge — to wade in water, esp the sea
  • podded — a somewhat elongated, two-valved seed vessel, as that of the pea or bean.
  • poddie — a user of or enthusiast for the iPod, a portable digital music player
  • poddle — to move or travel in a leisurely manner; amble
  • podial — relating to a podium or foot
  • podite — an arthropod limb.
  • podium — a small platform for the conductor of an orchestra, a public speaker, the recipient of a sports medal, etc.
  • podley — a young coalfish
  • podsol — spodosol.
  • podunk — any small and insignificant or inaccessible town or village: After a year in the big city, I was ready to move back to Podunk.
  • podzol — spodosol.
  • poodle — one of a breed of very active dogs, probably originating in Germany but regarded as the national dog of France, having long, thick, frizzy or curly hair usually trimmed in standard patterns, occurring in three varieties (standard, miniature, and toy) differing only in size, and originally used as a water retriever.
  • prodoc — (documentation)   A set of tools for software documentation from SPC.
  • ramrod — a rod for ramming down the charge of a muzzleloading firearm.
  • rebody — to give a new body to (something, esp a vehicle)
  • recode — a system for communication by telegraph, heliograph, etc., in which long and short sounds, light flashes, etc., are used to symbolize the content of a message: Morse code.
  • reshod — an external covering for the human foot, usually of leather and consisting of a more or less stiff or heavy sole and a lighter upper part ending a short distance above, at, or below the ankle.
  • rhodesCecil John, 1853–1902, English colonial capitalist and government administrator in southern Africa.
  • rhodic — of or containing rhodium, especially in the tetravalent state.
  • rhodo- — rose or rose-coloured
  • rhodos — Greek name of Rhodes.
  • rm-odp — (programming)   The ISO Reference Model for Open Distributed Environments.
  • rodded — made of or fitted with rods.
  • rodent — belonging or pertaining to the gnawing or nibbling mammals of the order Rodentia, including the mice, squirrels, beavers, etc.
  • rodger — a male given name, form of Roger.
  • rodman — a person who works with rods, as in making reinforced concrete.
  • rodney — George Brydges [brij-iz] /ˈbrɪdʒ ɪz/ (Show IPA), Baron, 1718–92, British admiral.
  • schrod — a young Atlantic codfish or haddock, especially one split for cooking.
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