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7-letter words containing a, t, v

  • obviate — to anticipate and prevent or eliminate (difficulties, disadvantages, etc.) by effective measures; render unnecessary: to obviate the risk of serious injury.
  • octaval — (music) Of, pertaining to, or relating to an octave.
  • octaves — Plural form of octave.
  • octavia — died 11 b.c, sister of Roman emperor Augustus and wife of Marc Anthony.
  • octavos — Plural form of octavo.
  • octavus — eighth.
  • ostrava — a city in N Moravia, in the NE Czech Republic.
  • outrave — to outdo in raving
  • ovality — the quality or state of being oval.
  • ovation — an enthusiastic public reception of a person, marked especially by loud and prolonged applause.
  • overact — (of an actor) act a role in an exaggerated manner.
  • overapt — too apt or having an excessive tendency (to)
  • overate — simple past tense of overeat.
  • overeat — to eat too much: If you overeat, you're bound to get fat.
  • overfat — Having too much fat as a proportion of body mass.
  • overtax — to tax too heavily.
  • ovulate — to produce and discharge eggs from an ovary or ovarian follicle.
  • parvati — the wife of Shiva and the benevolent form of the Mother Goddess.
  • pivotal — of, relating to, or serving as a pivot.
  • poltava — a city in E Ukraine, SW of Kharkov: Russian defeat of Swedes 1709.
  • pravity — depravity, moral degeneracy, perversion
  • private — privacy
  • provant — supplied with provisions
  • rustavi — a city in the SE Georgian Republic, SE of Tbilisi.
  • salavat — a city in the Bashkir Autonomous Republic, in the SW Russian Federation in Asia, S of Ufa.
  • salvete — welcome!
  • saratov — a city in the SW Russian Federation in Europe, on the Volga.
  • sattvic — Hinduism. characterized by sattva: having a serene, harmonious, balanced mind or attitude.
  • servant — a person employed by another, especially to perform domestic duties.
  • shavuot — a festival, celebrated on the sixth and seventh days of Sivan by Orthodox and Conservative Jews outside Israel but only on the sixth day by Reform Jews and Jews in Israel, that commemorates God's giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses.
  • slavist — a specialist in the study of Slavic languages, cultures, etc.
  • solvate — a compound formed by the interaction of a solvent and a solute.
  • stative — (of a verb) expressing a state or condition, as like, want, or believe, and usually used in simple, not progressive, tenses: I liked them. I want some. I will never believe it.
  • staving — one of the thin, narrow, shaped pieces of wood that form the sides of a cask, tub, or similar vessel.
  • strayve — to wander aimlessly
  • suavest — (of persons or their manner, speech, etc.) smoothly agreeable or polite; agreeably or blandly urbane.
  • suavity — a suave or smoothly agreeable quality.
  • taivert — confused; bewildered
  • taneyev — Sergei Ivanovich [syir-gey yi-vah-nuh-vyich] /syɪrˈgeɪ yɪˈvɑ nə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1856–1915, Russian composer and pianist.
  • tantivy — at full gallop: to ride tantivy.
  • tardive — appearing or tending to appear late, as in human development or in the treatment of a disease.
  • tavener — Sir John (Kenneth). 1944–2013, English composer, whose works include the cantata The Whale (1966), the opera Thérèse (1979), and the choral work The Last Discourse (1998); many of his later works are inspired by the liturgy of the Russian Orthodox Church
  • taverna — a small, unpretentious café or restaurant in Greece.
  • the vag — the Vagrancy Act
  • travail — painfully difficult or burdensome work; toil.
  • travers — P(amela) L. 1899–1996, Australian writer, especially of children's stories, in England.
  • travois — a transport device, formerly used by the Plains Indians, consisting of two poles joined by a frame and drawn by an animal.
  • trivial — of very little importance or value; insignificant: Don't bother me with trivial matters.
  • trivias — (in Roman religion) Hecate: so called because she was the goddess of the crossroads.
  • unvital — not vital or crucial; unessential; unnecessary
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