11-letter words containing d, e, l, a, v
- unavoidable — unable to be avoided; inevitable: an unavoidable delay.
- underivable — to receive or obtain from a source or origin (usually followed by from).
- undervalued — valued at too low a level or price
- undividable — unable to be divided
- undriveable — unable to be driven
- unevaluated — to judge or determine the significance, worth, or quality of; assess: to evaluate the results of an experiment.
- unflavoured — not flavoured
- 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.
- unvalidated — to make valid; substantiate; confirm: Time validated our suspicions.
- unvocalized — not articulated; unspoken; unvoiced
- valediction — an act of bidding farewell or taking leave.
- valedictory — bidding goodbye; saying farewell: a valedictory speech.
- valley wind — a wind that ascends a mountain valley during the day.
- valleyfield — a city in S Quebec, in E Canada, SW of Montreal, on the St. Lawrence.
- value added — something, as an item of equipment, that has been added to a product by a marketer or distributor to warrant a markup in the retail price.
- value-added — something, as an item of equipment, that has been added to a product by a marketer or distributor to warrant a markup in the retail price.
- van zeeland — Paul [poul] /paʊl/ (Show IPA), 1893–1973, Belgian statesman: premier 1935–37.
- varicelloid — resembling varicella.
- varicolored — having various colors; variegated; motley: a varicolored print.
- veridically — truthful; veracious.
- virginalled — played on the virginal
- vlaardingen — a city in the W Netherlands, at the mouth of the Rhine.
- volsteadism — the policy of prohibiting the sale of alcoholic beverages.
- waldemar iv — surnamed Atterdag. ?1320–75, king of Denmark (1340–75), who reunited the Danish territories but was defeated (1368) by a coalition of his Baltic neighbours
- waldgravine — a woman married to a waldgrave
- well-shaved — to remove a growth of beard with a razor.