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6-letter words that end in de

  • facade — Architecture. the front of a building, especially an imposing or decorative one. any side of a building facing a public way or space and finished accordingly.
  • founde — Obsolete spelling of found; Simple past tense and past participle of find.
  • friode — (humour, electronics)   /fri:'ohd/ (TMRC) A reversible (that is, fused, blown, or fried) diode. A friode may have been a SED at some time. See also LER.
  • fronde — either of two rebellious movements against the ministry of Cardinal Mazarin in the reign of Louis XIV, the first led by the parlement of Paris (1648–49) and the second by the princes (1650–53)
  • froudeJames Anthony, 1818–94, English historian.
  • g-code — 1. Johnsson & Augustsson, Chalmers Inst Tech. Intermediate language used by the G-machine, an implementation of graph reduction based on supercombinators. "Efficient Compilation of Lazy Evaluation", T. Johnsson, SIGPLAN Notices 19(6):58-69 (June 1984). 2. A machine-like language for the representation and interpretation of attributed grammars. Used as an intermediate language by the Coco compiler generator. "A Compiler Generator for Microcomputers", P. Rechenberg et al, P-H 1989.
  • gourde — a paper money and monetary unit of Haiti, equal to 100 centimes. Abbreviation: G., Gde.
  • grande — a town in NE Oregon.
  • grinde — Obsolete spelling of grind.
  • guarde — Obsolete form of guard.
  • guesdeJules [zhyl] /ʒül/ (Show IPA), (Mathieu Basile) 1845–1922, French socialist leader, editor, and writer.
  • halide — a chemical compound in which one of the elements is a halogen.
  • hexade — A series of six numbers.
  • hpcode — Stack-based intermediate language used by HP in many of its compilers for RISC and stack-based architectures. Supports Fortran, Ada, Pascal, COBOL and C++. Descended from Stanford's U-code.
  • illude — to deceive or trick.
  • impede — to retard in movement or progress by means of obstacles or hindrances; obstruct; hinder.
  • incede — to advance or march onwards in a stately or measured fashion
  • incide — (obsolete) To cut; to separate and remove.
  • inside — on the inner side or part of; within: inside the circle; inside the envelope.
  • invade — to enter forcefully as an enemy; go into with hostile intent: Germany invaded Poland in 1939.
  • iodide — a salt of hydriotic acid consisting of two elements, one of which is iodine, as sodium iodide, NaI.
  • isolde — German name of Iseult.
  • levade — a movement in which the horse first lowers its body on increasingly bent hocks, then sits on its hind hooves while keeping its forelegs raised and drawn in.
  • m-code — (language)   1. Intermediate language produced by some Modula-2 compilers. 2. The intermediate language for an SECD-like machine, used by the Concert implementation of MultiLISP.
  • nomade — Archaic form of nomad.
  • nosode — (in homeopathy) a preparation of substances secreted in the course of a disease, used in the treatment of that disease.
  • noyade — destruction or execution by drowning, especially as practiced at Nantes, France, in 1793–94, during the Reign of Terror.
  • onside — (of a player, especially in soccer or hockey) occupying a position on the field where playing the ball or puck is allowed; not offside.
  • opcode — (computing) A mnemonic used to refer to a microprocessor instruction in assembly language.
  • oreide — oroide.
  • oroide — an alloy containing copper, tin, etc., used to imitate gold.
  • oxhide — leather made from the hide of an ox
  • 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.
  • paladeGeorge Emil, 1912–2008, U.S. biologist, born in Romania: Nobel Prize in medicine 1974.
  • parade — a large public procession, usually including a marching band and often of a festive nature, held in honor of an anniversary, person, event, etc.
  • pesade — a maneuver in which the horse is made to rear, keeping its hind legs stationary and its forelegs drawn in.
  • pomade — a scented ointment, especially one used for the scalp or for dressing the hair.
  • quidde — Ludwig [loot-vikh,, lood-] /ˈlut vɪx,, ˈlud-/ (Show IPA), 1858–1941, German historian and pacifist: Nobel Peace Prize 1927.
  • recede — to go or move away; retreat; go to or toward a more distant point; withdraw.
  • 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.
  • remade — to make again or anew.
  • reside — to apply new siding, as to a house.
  • salade — sallet.
  • secede — to withdraw formally from an alliance, federation, or association, as from a political union, a religious organization, etc.
  • stride — to walk with long steps, as with vigor, haste, impatience, or arrogance.
  • strode — simple past tense of stride.
  • tirade — a prolonged outburst of bitter, outspoken denunciation: a tirade against smoking.
  • triode — a vacuum tube containing three elements, usually anode, cathode, and control grid.
  • u-code — Universal Pascal Code. Intermediate language, a generalisation of P-code for easier optimisation. Developed originally for the Los Alamos Cray-1 and the Lawrence Livermore S-1. A refined version currently used by MIPS compilers is descended from one at Stanford U. "Machine Independent Pascal Code Optimisation", D.R. Perkins et al, SIGPLAN Notices 14(8): 201-201 (1979). "A Transporter's Guide to the Stanford U-Code Compiler System", P. Nye et al, TR CSL Stanford U, June 1983. (See HPcode).
  • unlade — to take the lading, load, or cargo from; unload.
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