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12-letter words containing a, r, v, o

  • overestimate — to estimate at too high a value, amount, rate, or the like: Don't overestimate the car's trade-in value.
  • overfamiliar — commonly or generally known or seen: a familiar sight.
  • overfatigued — excessively fatigued
  • overidealize — to idealize excessively
  • overissuance — the act of issuing in excessive amounts
  • overliterary — excessively literary
  • overmannered — excessively mannered
  • overmaturity — (of a tree or forest) the state of having ceased to grow or have commercial value
  • overmedicate — to treat with medicine or medicaments.
  • overorganize — to stress formal structure, status, rules, and details excessively.
  • overornament — to decorate excessively
  • overpedalled — relating to overpedalling
  • overpersuade — to persuade (a person) against his or her inclination or intention: By threats and taunts they had overpersuaded him to steal the car.
  • overplanning — the act or instance of planning excessively
  • overpopulate — to fill with an excessive number of people, straining available resources and facilities: Expanding industry has overpopulated the western suburbs.
  • overpurchase — to acquire by the payment of money or its equivalent; buy.
  • overrashness — the act of being overrash
  • overreaching — to reach or extend over or beyond: The shelf overreached the nook and had to be planed down.
  • overreaction — to react or respond more strongly than is necessary or appropriate.
  • overreactive — tending to react.
  • overregulate — to apply rules and regulations excessively to (something)
  • overreliance — confident or trustful dependence.
  • oversanguine — too optimistic
  • oversaturate — to cause (a substance) to unite with the greatest possible amount of another substance, through solution, chemical combination, or the like.
  • overseas cap — a soft, brimless military cap
  • oversedation — the calming of mental excitement or abatement of physiological function, especially by the administration of a drug.
  • overstaffing — the provision of an excessive number of staff for (a factory, hotel, etc)
  • overstrained — exerted, taxed, or used to an excessive extent
  • overtaxation — to tax too heavily.
  • overtime ban — a refusal by employees to work overtime
  • overtime pay — a higher than normal rate of pay, for work done as overtime
  • ovolactarian — lacto-ovo-vegetarian.
  • parma violet — a variety of the sweet violet, Viola odorata, that is the source of an essential oil used in perfumery.
  • parrot fever — psittacosis.
  • parvifoliate — (of plants) having small leaves in comparison with the size of the stem
  • performative — (of an expression or statement) performing an act by the very fact of being uttered, as with the expression “I promise,” that performs the act of promising.
  • perseverator — a person who perseverates
  • pervicacious — extremely willful; obstinate; stubborn.
  • petrozavodsk — a city in NW Russia, capital of the Karelian Autonomous Republic, on Lake Onega: developed around ironworks established by Peter the Great in 1703; university (1940). Pop: 265 000 (2005 est)
  • photoengrave — to make a photoengraving of.
  • photogravure — any of various processes, based on photography, by which an intaglio engraving is formed on a metal plate, from which ink reproductions are made.
  • picornavirus — any of a group of small, RNA-containing viruses of the family Picornaviridae, infectious to humans and other animals, and including the poliovirus and the rhinoviruses that cause the common cold.
  • polar vortex — a whirling mass of very cold air that sits over the North or South Pole: A displaced polar vortex is causing Arctic temperatures across the United States.
  • pole vaulter — A pole vaulter is an athlete who performs the pole vault.
  • polyomavirus — any of a genus (Polyomavirus) of papovaviruses that naturally infect wild and laboratory mice, and that cause tumors when injected into newborn mice
  • pons varolii — pons (def 1).
  • popular vote — the vote for a U.S. presidential candidate made by the qualified voters, as opposed to that made by the electoral college. Compare electoral vote.
  • post-harvest — Also, harvesting. the gathering of crops.
  • poverty trap — If someone is in a poverty trap, they are very poor but cannot improve their income because the money they get from the government decreases as the money they earn increases.
  • power vacuum — a situation when a government has no identifiable central authority
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