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11-letter words that end in ode

  • access code — a sequence of characters that allows the user access to a secure area or to a secure system
  • anticathode — the target electrode for the stream of electrons in a vacuum tube, esp an X-ray tube
  • baudot code — (communications)   (For etymology, see baud) A character set predating EBCDIC and used originally and primarily on paper tape. Use of Baudot reportedly survives in TDDs and some HAM radio applications. In Baudot, characters are expressed using five bits. Baudot uses two code sub-sets, the "letter set" (LTRS), and the "figure set" (FIGS). The FIGS character (11011) signals that the following code is to be interpreted as being in the FIGS set, until this is reset by the LTRS (11111) character. binary hex LTRS FIGS -------------------------- 00011 03 A - 11001 19 B ? 01110 0E C : 01001 09 D $ 00001 01 E 3 01101 0D F ! 11010 1A G & 10100 14 H # 00110 06 I 8 01011 0B J BELL 01111 0F K ( 10010 12 L ) 11100 1C M . 01100 0C N , 11000 18 O 9 10110 16 P 0 10111 17 Q 1 01010 0A R 4 00101 05 S ' 10000 10 T 5 00111 07 U 7 11110 1E V ; 10011 13 W 2 11101 1D X / 10101 15 Y 6 10001 11 Z " 01000 08 CR CR 00010 02 LF LF 00100 04 SP SP 11111 1F LTRS LTRS 11011 1B FIGS FIGS 00000 00 [..unused..] Where CR is carriage return, LF is linefeed, BELL is the bell, SP is space, and STOP is the stop character. Note: these bit values are often shown in inverse order, depending (presumably) which side of the paper tape you were looking at. Local implementations of Baudot may differ in the use of #, STOP, BELL, and '.
  • binary code — Binary code is a computer code that uses the binary number system.
  • cephalopode — Archaic form of cephalopod.
  • church mode — a mode belonging to a codified system of modes in use in Gregorian chant and in other music to c1600.
  • colour code — a system of easily distinguishable colours, as for the identification of electrical wires or resistors
  • 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.
  • dorian mode — an authentic church mode represented on the white keys of a keyboard instrument by an ascending scale from D to D.
  • formal mode — the style in which words are explicitly mentioned rather than used of their subject matter. "Fido" is a dog's name is in the formal mode, while "Fido is a dog" is in the material mode
  • ghetto code — (humour, programming)   A particularly inelegant and obviously suboptimal section of code that still meets the original requirements.
  • ionian mode — an authentic church mode represented on the white keys of a keyboard instrument by an ascending scale from C to C.
  • legacy code — legacy system
  • lydian mode — an authentic church mode represented on the white keys of a keyboard instrument by an ascending scale from F to F.
  • mother lode — Mining. a rich or important lode.
  • mumble mode — (jargon)   The mode a program, piece of hardware, or other system is said to be in when it is still running and perhaps reacting to input and/or occasionally producing output (especially if it shouldn't), but in a way that appears wildly inappropriate to the task it is supposed to perform. Compare "off the trolley" and "deep space".
  • normal mode — an oscillation of a mechanical system in which all particles move with the same frequency and phase.
  • object code — the machine-language output of a compiler or assembler that is ready for execution.
  • pneumathode — a band or pore of aerating tissue, esp along the stipes of ferns
  • postal code — British. postcode.
  • pseudo-code — a program code unrelated to the hardware of a particular computer and requiring conversion to the code used by the computer before the program can be used.
  • sapphic ode — Horatian ode.
  • source code — program instructions that must be translated by a compiler, interpreter, or assembler into object code before execution.
  • zener diode — a semiconductor diode across which the reverse voltage remains almost constant over a wide range of currents, used especially to regulate voltage.

On this page, we collect all 11-letter words ending in ODE. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 11-letter word that ends in ODE to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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