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10-letter words containing ort

  • exportable — Able to be exported.
  • extortions — Plural form of extortion.
  • fall short — not be satisfactory
  • farnsworth — Philo Taylor [fahy-loh] /ˈfaɪ loʊ/ (Show IPA), 1906–71, U.S. physicist and inventor: pioneer in the field of television.
  • ferry port — a town or place alongside navigable water with facilities for the loading and unloading of ferries
  • feverworts — Plural form of feverwort.
  • fort bliss — a military reservation and U.S. Army training center NE of El Paso in W Texas.
  • fort boise — a fort formerly near Boise, in SW Idaho: an important post on the Oregon Trail.
  • fort bragg — a military reservation and U.S. Army training center in S central North Carolina NW of Fayetteville.
  • fort dodge — a city in central Iowa, on the Des Moines River.
  • fort henryJoseph, 1797–1878, U.S. physicist.
  • fort irwin — a military reservation in SW California, NE of Barstow.
  • fort lewis — a military reservation in W central Washington State, SW of Tacoma.
  • fort meigsFort. Fort Meigs.
  • fort payne — a town in NE Alabama.
  • fort riley — a military reservation in NE Kansas, NE of Junction City.
  • fort smith — a city in W Arkansas, on the Arkansas River.
  • fort wayne — a city in NE Indiana.
  • fort worth — a city in N Texas.
  • fortalices — Plural form of fortalice.
  • fortepiano — a piano of the late 18th and early 19th centuries with greater clarity but less volume, resonance, and dynamic range than a modern grand, revived in the late 20th century for the performance of the music of its period.
  • forthbring — (obsolete) To bring forth; bring out; produce.
  • forthgoing — an instance of going forth
  • forthright — going straight to the point; frank; direct; outspoken: It's sometimes difficult to be forthright and not give offense.
  • fortifying — Present participle of fortify.
  • fortissimo — (a direction) very loud.
  • fortnights — Plural form of fortnight.
  • fortran 66 — Fortran IV standardised. ASA X3.9-1966.
  • fortran 77 — A popular version of Fortran with Block IF, PARAMETER and SAVE statements added, but still no WHILE. It has fixed-length character strings, format-free I/O, and arrays with lower bounds.
  • fortran 90 — (Previously "Fortran 8x" and "Fortran Extended") An extensive enlargement of Fortran 77. Fortran 90 has derived types, assumed shape arrays, array sections, functions returning arrays, case statement, module subprograms and internal subprograms, optional and keyword subprogram arguments, recursion, and dynamic allocation. It is defined in ISO 1539:1991, soon to be adopted by ANSI.
  • fortran ii — 1958. Added subroutines.
  • fortran iv — IBM 1962. For the IBM 7090/94. Many implementations went well beyond the original definition.
  • fortran vi — IBM's internal name for early PL/I work ca. 1963.
  • fortransit — (language)   Fortran Internal Translator. A subset of Fortran translated into IT on the IBM 650. It was in use in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Compilation took place in several steps (using punched cards as the only input/output media). FORTRANSIT was converted to IT Internal Translator which was converted into SOAP and thence to machine code. In the SOAP -> machine code step, the user had to include card decks for all the subroutines used in his FORTRANSIT program (including e.g. square root, sine, and even basic floating point routines).
  • fortressed — Simple past tense and past participle of fortress.
  • fortresses — Plural form of fortress.
  • fortuities — Plural form of fortuity.
  • fortuitism — the doctrine that evolutionary adaptations are the result of chance
  • fortuitous — happening or produced by chance; accidental: a fortuitous encounter.
  • forty-five — a cardinal number, 40 plus 5.
  • forty-four — a cardinal number, 40 plus 4.
  • forty-nine — a cardinal number, 40 plus 9.
  • fortypenny — being 5 inches (13 cm) long: a fortypenny nail. Symbol: 40d.
  • fourscorth — eightieth
  • galsworthyJohn, 1867–1933, English novelist and dramatist: Nobel Prize 1932.
  • gansevoortPeter, 1749–1812, U.S. general: soldier in the American Revolutionary War.
  • give forth — to send forth; emit; issue
  • good sport — sb good-humoured
  • harmsworthAlfred Charles William, Viscount Northcliffe, 1865–1922, English journalist, publisher, and politician.
  • hateworthy — Worthy of being hated, detestable, despicable.
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