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6-letter words containing x, d

  • ixodid — any of numerous ticks of the family Ixodidae, comprising the hard ticks.
  • jinxed — Simple past tense and past participle of jinx.
  • ledoux — Claude-Nicolas [klohd-nee-kaw-lah] /kloʊd ni kɔˈlɑ/ (Show IPA), 1736–1806, French architect.
  • madduxGregory Alan ("Greg") born 1966, U.S. baseball pitcher.
  • myxoid — resembling mucus.
  • oxford1st Earl of, Harley, Robert.
  • oxhead — the head of an ox
  • oxhide — leather made from the hide of an ox
  • oxidic — a compound in which oxygen is bonded to one or more electropositive atoms.
  • oxnard — a city in SW California, NW of Los Angeles.
  • pdftex — (tool)   A modification of TeX to produce PDF output instead of the canonical DVI.
  • sexfid — split into six lobes or clefts
  • sexted — a sexually explicit digital image, text message, etc., sent to someone usually by cell phone.
  • spadix — an inflorescence consisting of a spike with a fleshy or thickened axis, usually enclosed in a spathe.
  • taxied — a taxicab.
  • texted — the main body of matter in a manuscript, book, newspaper, etc., as distinguished from notes, appendixes, headings, illustrations, etc.
  • toxoid — a toxin rendered nontoxic by treatment with chemical agents or by physical means and used for administration into the body in order to produce specific immunity by stimulating the production of antibodies.
  • tuxedo — Also called dinner jacket. a man's jacket for semiformal evening dress, traditionally of black or dark-blue color and characteristically having satin or grosgrain facing on the lapels.
  • unaxed — (esp of trees) not axed or chopped
  • xanadu — a place of great beauty, luxury, and contentment.
  • xmodem — (communications)   Ward Christensen's file transfer protocol, probably the most widely available protocol used for file transfer over serial lines (e.g. between modems). XMODEM uses 128-byte packets with error detection, allowing the receiver to request retransmission of a corrupted packet. XModem is fairly slow but reliable. Several variations have been proposed with increasing packet sizes (e.g. XMODEM-1K) and different error detection (CRC instead of checksum) to take advantage of faster modems. Sending and receiving programs can negotiate to establish the best protocol they both support. John Mahr wrote the original XMODEM CRC error correction code. This implementation was backward compatible with Christensen's original checksum code. It improved the error detection from 98% to 99.97% and improved the reliability of transmitting binary files. Standard XMODEM specifies a one-second timeout during the reception of characters in the data block portion of a packet. Chuck Forsberg improved upon XMODEM by developing YMODEM and ZMODEM.
  • xyloid — Characteristic of wood; woody.
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