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5-letter words containing d, e, c

  • dolce — sweet; soft.
  • dooce — to dismiss an employee for something he or she has written on a website or blog
  • douce — sedate; modest; quiet.
  • dreck — excrement; dung.
  • drice — frozen carbon dioxide
  • duces — a leader or dictator.
  • dulce — a female given name: from the Latin word meaning “sweet.”.
  • dunce — a dull-witted, stupid, or ignorant person; dolt.
  • ecard — A computerized greeting card, typically hosted on a Web site to which the recipient is directed by an e-mail message.
  • ectad — outward.
  • edict — a decree issued by a sovereign or other authority. Synonyms: dictum, pronouncement.
  • edsac — Electronic Discrete Sequential Automatic Computer
  • educe — to draw forth or bring out, as something potential or latent; elicit; develop.
  • educt — something educed; eduction.
  • faced — having a specified kind of face or number of faces (usually used in combination): a sweet-faced child; the two-faced god.
  • laced — Tainted with something, especially a drug.
  • maced — Simple past tense and past participle of mace.
  • medic — any plant belonging to the genus Medicago, of the legume family, having trifoliate leaves and grown as a forage crop.
  • medoc — a wine-growing region in Gironde, in SW France.
  • meldc — A reflective object-oriented concurrent programming language developed in 1990 by the MELD Project of the Programming Systems Laboratory at Columbia University. MELDC is a redesign of MELD based on C. The core of the architecture is a micro-kernel (the MELDC kernel), which encapsulates a minimum set of entities that cannot be modelled as objects. All components outside of the kernel are implemented as objects in MELDC itself and are modularised in the MELDC libraries. MELDC is reflective in three dimensions: structural, computational and architectural. The structural reflection indicates that classes and meta-classes are objects, which are written in MELDC. The computational reflection means that object behaviours can be computed and extended at run time. The architectural reflection indicates that new features/properties (e.g. persistency and remoteness) can be constructed in MELDC. Version 2.0 runs on Sun-4/SunOS 4.1 and DECstation and MIPS/Ultrix 4.2. E-mail: Gail Kaiser <[email protected]>. MELDC is available under licence from <[email protected]> and may not be used for commercial purposes.
  • niced — Simple past tense and past participle of nice.
  • ocode — An assembly language for a stack-based virtual machine, used as the intermediate language of the Cambridge BCPL compiler.
  • paced — having a specified or indicated pace (usually used in combination): fast-paced.
  • raced — a contest of speed, as in running, riding, driving, or sailing.
  • recd. — In written English, recd. can be used as an abbreviation for received.
  • riced — the starchy seeds or grain of an annual marsh grass, Oryza sativa, cultivated in warm climates and used for food.
  • scend — to heave in a swell.
  • scode — The internal representation used by the Liar compiler for MIT Scheme.
  • specd — Usually, specs. specification (def 2).
  • tcode — Intermediate language used by the Spineless Tagless G-machine (an abstract machine based on graph reduction) designed as a target for compilation of non-strict functional languages. "The Spineless tagless G- machine", S. Peyton Jones et al, Fourth Intl Conf Func Prog Langs and Comp Arch pp.184-201, ACM Sept 1989.
  • vcode — 1. The intermediate language used in the compilation of NESL. 2. The intermediate language used in the compilation of [email protected].
  • vedic — of or relating to the Veda or Vedas.
  • viced — to hold, press, or squeeze with or as with a vise.
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