11-letter words containing e, r, i, v
- reiterative — to say or do again or repeatedly; repeat, often excessively.
- rejuvenized — to rejuvenate.
- relative to — a person who is connected with another or others by blood or marriage.
- reluctivity — the tendency of a magnetic circuit to conduct magnetic flux, equal to the reciprocal of the permeability of the circuit.
- remotivated — to provide with a motive, or a cause or reason to act; incite; impel.
- rent review — a provision in the lease of a business premise whereby the amount of the rent being paid is reconsidered at stated intervals, for example every three or five years
- replicative — characterized by or capable of replication, especially of an experiment.
- reprivatize — to restore to private control; remove from governmental jurisdiction.
- reprobative — reprobating; expressing reprobation.
- reprovingly — to criticize or correct, especially gently: to reprove a pupil for making a mistake.
- reprovision — a clause in a legal instrument, a law, etc., providing for a particular matter; stipulation; proviso.
- repudiative — to reject as having no authority or binding force: to repudiate a claim.
- reservation — the act of keeping back, withholding, or setting apart.
- resistively — in a resistive manner, with resistance
- resistivity — the power or property of resistance.
- restitutive — reparation made by giving an equivalent or compensation for loss, damage, or injury caused; indemnification.
- restiveness — impatient of control, restraint, or delay, as persons; restless; uneasy.
- restorative — serving to restore; pertaining to restoration.
- restrictive — tending or serving to restrict.
- resultative — (in grammar) a phrase which describes the state of a noun by completing the verb phrase
- retaliative — to return like for like, especially evil for evil: to retaliate for an injury.
- retentivity — the power to retain; retentiveness.
- retributive — characterized by or involving retribution: retributive justice.
- retrievable — to recover or regain: to retrieve the stray ball.
- retroactive — operative with respect to past occurrences, as a statute; retrospective: a retroactive law.
- revaccinate — to vaccinate (a person or animal) again
- revalidated — to make valid; substantiate; confirm: Time validated our suspicions.
- revaluating — to make a new or revised valuation of; revalue.
- revaluation — to make a new or revised valuation of; revalue.
- revelations — the last book of the New Testament, containing visionary descriptions of heaven, of conflicts between good and evil, and of the end of the world
- revendicate — to reclaim or demand the restoring of (something)
- reverential — of the nature of or characterized by reverence; reverent: reverential awe.
- reverse bid — a bid of a higher-ranking suit at the two level or higher by a player whose previous bid was of a lower-ranking suit.
- reversioner — a person who possesses a reversion.
- revibration — the act of vibrating.
- revictualed — victuals, food supplies; provisions.
- review body — an organization sponsored by the government to make independent recommendations
- review copy — a copy of a book sent by a publisher to a journal, newspaper, etc, to enable it to be reviewed
- revindicate — to clear, as from an accusation, imputation, suspicion, or the like: to vindicate someone's honor.
- revisionary — the act or work of revising.
- revisionism — advocacy or approval of revision.
- revisionist — an advocate of revision, especially of some political or religious doctrine.
- revisualize — to recall or form mental images or pictures.
- revitalised — to give new life to.
- revitalized — restored; active again
- revivalists — a person, especially a member of the clergy, who promotes or holds religious revivals.
- revivescent — reviving
- reviviscent — the act or state of being revived; revival; reanimation.
- rh negative — See under Rh factor.
- rh positive — See under Rh factor.