0%

9-letter words containing e, v, i, c

  • embracive — (archaic) Disposed to embrace; fond of caressing.
  • enhancive — Tending to enhance something.
  • equivocal — Open to more than one interpretation; ambiguous.
  • escovitch — Alternative form of escoveitch.
  • evangelic — Evangelical.
  • evictions — Plural form of eviction.
  • evidenced — Simple past tense and past participle of evidence.
  • evidences — Plural form of evidence.
  • evincible — Capable of being proved or clearly brought to light; demonstrable.
  • evincibly — in an evincible manner
  • evocating — Present participle of evocate.
  • evocation — The act of calling out or forth, or evoking.
  • evocative — Bringing strong images, memories, or feelings to mind.
  • exceptive — Exceptional, having an exception.
  • excessive — More than is necessary, normal, or desirable; immoderate.
  • exclusive — An item or story published or broadcast by only one source.
  • excretive — Having the power of excreting, or promoting excretion.
  • excursive — Of the nature of an excursion; ranging widely; digressive.
  • executive — Having the power to put plans, actions, or laws into effect.
  • expective — Expectative.
  • expencive — Archaic form of expensive.
  • factitive — noting or pertaining to verbs that express the idea of making or rendering in a certain way and that take a direct object and an additional word or group of words indicating the result of the process, as made in They made him king.
  • fictively — In a fictive manner.
  • fivepence — A monetary amount of five pence.
  • fivescore — (archaic) Hundred.
  • fricative — (of a speech sound) characterized by audible friction produced by forcing the breath through a constricted or partially obstructed passage in the vocal tract; spirantal; spirant.
  • give back — return: sth to sb
  • give-back — the quality or state of being resilient; springiness.
  • givebacks — Plural form of giveback.
  • grievance — a wrong considered as grounds for complaint, or something believed to cause distress: Inequitable taxation is the chief grievance.
  • helvetica — (text)   One of the most widely used sans-serif typefaces, developed in 1957 by Swiss typeface designer Max Miedinger with Eduard Hoffmann. Originally called Neue Haas Grotesk, it was renamed Helvetica for the international market. Helvetica is very similar to the common Arial typeface. The name is Latin for Swiss.
  • humective — tending to moisten
  • impactive — caused by impact: impactive pain.
  • in clover — any of various plants of the genus Trifolium, of the legume family, having trifoliolate leaves and dense flower heads, many species of which, as T. pratense, are cultivated as forage plants.
  • incendive — Able to ignite, or cause ignition.
  • incensive — Tending to excite or provoke; inflammatory.
  • incentive — something that incites or tends to incite to action or greater effort, as a reward offered for increased productivity.
  • inceptive — beginning; initial.
  • inclusive — including or encompassing the stated limit or extremes in consideration or account (usually used postpositively): from 6 to 37 inclusive.
  • incursive — making incursions.
  • incurvate — curved, especially inward.
  • indictive — Proclaimed; declared; public.
  • inductive — of, relating to, or involving electrical induction or magnetic induction.
  • infective — infectious.
  • ingveonic — of or relating to Old English, Old Frisian, and Old Saxon, taken collectively.
  • injective — (mathematics) Of, relating to, or being an injection: such that each element of the image (or range) is associated with at most one element of the preimage (or domain); inverse-deterministic.
  • inservice — taking place while one is employed: an in-service training program.
  • invacuate — To confine (people) to a closed area in an emergency situation.
  • invection — (obsolete) An inveighing against; invective.
  • invective — vehement or violent denunciation, censure, or reproach.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?