Yes, the java Set class.
Via Java SE tutorial:
s1.containsAll(s2) — returns true if s2 is a subset of s1. (s2 is a
subset of s1 if set s1 contains all of the elements in s2.)
s1.addAll(s2) — transforms s1 into the union of s1 and s2. (The
union of two sets is the set containing all of the elements contained
in either set.)
s1.retainAll(s2) — transforms s1 into the intersection of s1 and s2.
(The intersection of two sets is the set containing only the elements
common to both sets.)
s1.removeAll(s2) — transforms s1 into the (asymmetric) set
difference of s1 and s2. (For example, the set difference of s1 minus
s2 is the set containing all of the elements found in s1 but not in
s2.)
http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/collections/interfaces/set.html