You're missing EmbedVM, homepage here, svn repo here. Remember to check out both [1,2] videos on the front page ;)
From the homepage:
EmbedVM is a small embeddable virtual machine for microcontrollers
with a C-like language frontend. It has been tested with GCC and AVR
microcontrollers. But as the Virtual machine is rather simple it
should be easy to port it to other architectures.
The VM simulates a 16bit CPU that can access up to 64kB of memory. It
can only operate on 16bit values and arrays of 16bit and 8bit values.
There is no support for complex data structures (struct, objects,
etc.). A function can have a maximum of 32 local variables and 32
arguments.
Besides the memory for the VM, a small structure holding the VM state
and the reasonable amount of memory the EmbedVM functions need on the
stack there are no additional memory requirements for the VM.
Especially the VM does not depend on any dymaic memory management.
EmbedVM is optimized for size and simplicity, not execution speed. The
VM itself takes up about 3kB of program memory on an AVR
microcontroller. On an AVR ATmega168 running at 16MHz the VM can
execute about 75 VM instructions per millisecond.
All memory accesses done by the VM are parformed using user callback
functions. So it is possible to have some or all of the VM memory on
external memory devices, flash memory, etc. or "memory-map" hardware
functions to the VM.
The compiler is a UNIX/Linux commandline tool that reads in a *.evm
file and generates bytecode in vaious formats (binary file, intel hex,
C array initializers and a special debug output format). It also
generates a symbol file that can be used to access data in the VM
memory from the host application.
The C-like language looks like this: http://svn.clifford.at/embedvm/trunk/examples/numberquizz/vmcode.evm