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11-letter words containing d, a, n, v, e, r

  • landgravine — the wife of a landgrave.
  • maiden over — Cricket. an over in which no runs are made.
  • maidservant — a female servant.
  • manoeuvered — Simple past tense and past participle of manoeuver.
  • move around — be mobile, active
  • over-demand — to ask for with proper authority; claim as a right: He demanded payment of the debt.
  • over-expand — to increase in extent, size, volume, scope, etc.: Heat expands most metals. He hopes to expand his company.
  • over-handle — a part of a thing made specifically to be grasped or held by the hand.
  • overdrawing — Present participle of overdraw.
  • overloading — (language)   (Or "Operator overloading"). Use of a single symbol to represent operators with different argument types, e.g. "-", used either, as a monadic operator to negate an expression, or as a dyadic operator to return the difference between two expressions. Another example is "+" used to add either integers or floating-point numbers. Overloading is also known as ad-hoc polymorphism. User-defined operator overloading is provided by several modern programming languages, e.g. C++'s class system and the functional programming language Haskell's type classes. Ad-hoc polymorphism (better described as overloading) is the ability to use the same syntax for objects of different types, e.g. "+" for addition of reals and integers or "-" for unary negation or diadic subtraction. Parametric polymorphism allows the same object code for a function to handle arguments of many types but overloading only reuses syntax and requires different code to handle different types.
  • overplanned — resulting from overplanning
  • rejuvenated — to make young again; restore to youthful vigor, appearance, etc.: That vacation has certainly rejuvenated him.
  • revendicate — to reclaim or demand the restoring of (something)
  • revindicate — to clear, as from an accusation, imputation, suspicion, or the like: to vindicate someone's honor.
  • servanthood — the condition of being a servant
  • thorvaldsen — Albert Bertal [ahl-bert bar-tuh l] /ˈɑl bɛrt ˈbær təl/ (Show IPA), 1770–1844, Danish sculptor.
  • thread vein — a small red or purple capillary near to the surface of the skin
  • underactive — insufficiently active: an underactive thyroid gland.
  • underivable — to receive or obtain from a source or origin (usually followed by from).
  • undervalued — valued at too low a level or price
  • undriveable — unable to be driven
  • unflavoured — not flavoured
  • unharvested — Also, harvesting. the gathering of crops.
  • unleveraged — the action of a lever, a rigid bar that pivots about one point and that is used to move an object at a second point by a force applied at a third.
  • untravelled — not having traveled, especially to distant places; not having gained experience by travel.
  • untraversed — not traversed; that has not been traversed
  • unvarnished — plain; clear; straightforward; without vagueness or subterfuge; frank: the unvarnished truth.
  • up-and-over — (of a door, etc) opened by being lifted and moved into a horizontal position
  • van der hum — a spicy liqueur from South Africa, flavored with tangerine and herbs.
  • van der zeeJames, 1886–1983, U.S. photographer.
  • vendemiaire — (in the French Revolutionary calendar) the first month of the year, extending from September 22 to October 21.
  • veratridine — a yellowish-white, amorphous, water-soluble, poisonous alkaloid, C 36 H 51 NO 11 , occurring with veratrine in the seeds of the sabadilla.
  • vinegarweed — a plant, Trichostema lanceolatum, of the mint family, native to the western coast of the U.S., having clusters of blue flowers with long, protruding filaments and growing in dry, sandy soil.
  • vineyardist — a person who owns or operates a vineyard.
  • virginalled — played on the virginal
  • vlaardingen — a city in the W Netherlands, at the mouth of the Rhine.
  • waldgravine — a woman married to a waldgrave
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