0%

12-letter words containing a, l, e, v

  • intravesical — Within the urinary bladder.
  • intravitreal — Within an eye.
  • invercargill — a city on S South Island, in New Zealand.
  • investigable — capable of being investigated.
  • inveterately — settled or confirmed in a habit, practice, feeling, or the like: an inveterate gambler.
  • invulnerable — incapable of being wounded, hurt, or damaged.
  • invulnerably — In an invulnerable manner.
  • irrelatively — In an irrelative manner.
  • irrelevances — Plural form of irrelevance.
  • irrelevantly — not relevant; not applicable or pertinent: His lectures often stray to interesting but irrelevant subjects.
  • irrelievable — incapable of being relieved.
  • irreprovable — Not reprovable; irreproachable.
  • irreprovably — in an irreprovable manner
  • irresolvable — not resolvable; incapable of being resolved, analyzable, or solvable.
  • irresolvably — In an irresolvable manner.
  • jacksonville — a seaport in NE Florida, on the St. John's River.
  • japan clover — a drought-resistant bush clover, Lespedeza striata, of the legume family, introduced to the southern Atlantic states from Asia, having numerous tiny trifoliate leaves valued for pasturage and hay.
  • java servlet — (web)   (By analogy with "applet") A Java program that runs as part of a network service, typically an HTTP server and responds to requests from clients. The most common use for a servlet is to extend a web server by generating web content dynamically. For example, a client may need information from a database; a servlet can be written that receives the request, gets and processes the data as needed by the client and then returns the result to the client. Servlets are more flexible than CGI scripts and, being written in Java, more portable. The spelling "servelet" is occasionally seen but JavaSoft spell it "servlet". There is no such thing as a "serverlet".
  • javelin fish — a fish of the genus Pomadasys of semitropical Australian seas with a long spine on its anal fin
  • jugular vein — vein that carries blood from head to heart
  • kelvin scaleWilliam Thomson, 1st Baron, 1824–1907, English physicist and mathematician.
  • la verendrye — Pierre Gaultier de Varenne [French pyer goh-tyey duh va-ren] /French pyɛr goʊˈtyeɪ də vaˈrɛn/ (Show IPA), Sieur de, 1685–1749, Canadian explorer of North America.
  • laffer curve — a relationship postulated between tax rates and tax receipts indicating that rates above a certain level actually produce less revenue because they discourage taxable endeavors and vice versa.
  • lake vättern — a lake in S central Sweden: the second largest lake in Sweden; linked to Lake Vänern by the Göta Canal; drains into the Baltic. Area: 1912 sq km (738 sq miles)
  • landgraviate — the office, jurisdiction, or territory of a landgrave.
  • landgravines — Plural form of landgravine.
  • lap dissolve — dissolve (def 17).
  • larval stage — Describes a period of monomaniacal concentration on coding apparently passed through by all fledgling hackers. Common symptoms include the perpetration of more than one 36-hour hacking run in a given week; neglect of all other activities including usual basics like food, sleep, and personal hygiene; and a chronic case of advanced bleary-eye. Can last from 6 months to 2 years, the apparent median being around 18 months. A few so afflicted never resume a more "normal" life, but the ordeal seems to be necessary to produce really wizardly (as opposed to merely competent) programmers. See also wannabee. A less protracted and intense version of larval stage (typically lasting about a month) may recur when one is learning a new OS or programming language.
  • lascaux cave — a cave in Lascaux, France, discovered in 1940 and containing exceptionally fine Paleolithic wall paintings and engravings thought to date to Magdalenian times (c13,000–8500 b.c.).
  • lavender bag — a small fabric bag filled with dried lavender flowers and placed amongst clothes or linen to scent them
  • lawn sleeves — (used with a plural verb) the sleeves of lawn forming part of the dress of an Anglican bishop.
  • laxativeness — the condition or quality of being laxative
  • leave behind — fail to bring
  • leave-taking — a saying farewell; a parting or goodbye; departure: His leave-taking was brief.
  • levalloisian — of, relating to, or characteristic of a distinctive late Lower and Middle Paleolithic method of preparing a stone core so that preformed thin, oval or triangular flakes with sharp edges could be struck from it.
  • level-headed — having common sense and sound judgment; sensible.
  • lever-action — (of a rifle) having a lever action.
  • levi strauss — David Friedrich [dah-veet free-drikh] /ˈdɑ vit ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1808–74, German theologian, philosopher, and author.
  • levi-straussClaude, 1908–2009, French anthropologist and educator, born in Belgium: founder of structural anthropology.
  • levitational — Relating to levitation.
  • levorotation — Rotation in an anticlockwise direction, especially such rotation of the plane of polarized light.
  • levorotatory — turning to the left, as the rotation to the left of the plane of polarization of light in certain crystals and compounds. Symbol: l-.
  • life savings — a person who rescues another from danger of death, especially from drowning.
  • lignum vitae — either of two tropical American trees, Guaiacum officinale or G. sanctum, of the caltrop family, having very hard, heavy wood.
  • line voltage — the voltage supplied by a power line, measured at the point of use.
  • live in fear — You can use expressions such as to live in fear and to live in terror to indicate that someone is always thinking about an unpleasant or frightening event, because they think that it might happen.
  • liverpolitan — a native or inhabitant of Liverpool
  • liverpudlian — a seaport in Merseyside, in W England, on the Mersey estuary.
  • living death — a completely miserable, joyless existence, experience, situation, etc.; ordeal: He found the steaming jungle a living death.
  • living space — home: rooms, etc.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?