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8-letter words containing e, v, i, t

  • genetive — Alternative spelling of genitive.
  • genitive — (in certain inflected languages) noting a case of nouns, pronouns, or adjectives, used primarily to express possession, measure, or origin: as John's hat, week's vacation, duty's call.
  • give out — to present voluntarily and without expecting compensation; bestow: to give a birthday present to someone.
  • given to — past participle of give.
  • grievant — a person who submits a complaint for arbitration.
  • heaviest — of great weight; hard to lift or carry: a heavy load.
  • helvetia — an Alpine region in Roman times, corresponding to the W and N parts of Switzerland.
  • helvetic — a Swiss Protestant; Zwinglian.
  • helvetii — a Celtic tribe from SW Germany who settled in Helvetia from about 200 bc
  • ideative — to form an idea, thought, or image of.
  • ignatiev — Count Nikolai Pavlovich. 1832–1908, Russian diplomat and politician. As ambassador to Turkey (1864–77), he negotiated the Treaty of San Stefano (1878) ending the Russo-Turkish War
  • illative — of, relating to, or expressing illation; inferential: an illative word such as “therefore.”.
  • inactive — not active: an inactive volcano.
  • indevout — not devout; lacking religious devotion; irreligious
  • innative — native, or existing in a person or animal from birth
  • innovate — to introduce something new; make changes in anything established.
  • interval — an intervening period of time: an interval of 50 years.
  • invected — noting an edge of a charge, as an ordinary, consisting of a series of small convex curves.
  • invented — Fictional, made up, imaginary.
  • inventor — a person who invents, especially one who devises some new process, appliance, machine, or article; one who makes inventions.
  • inverity — the state or quality of being untrue
  • inverted — to turn upside down.
  • inverter — a person or thing that inverts.
  • invertin — an enzyme, occurring in yeast and in the digestive juices of animals, that causes the inversion of cane sugar into invert sugar.
  • invertor — any muscle that turns a limb or part inward.
  • invested — to put (money) to use, by purchase or expenditure, in something offering potential profitable returns, as interest, income, or appreciation in value.
  • investor — to put (money) to use, by purchase or expenditure, in something offering potential profitable returns, as interest, income, or appreciation in value.
  • invitees — to request the presence or participation of in a kindly, courteous, or complimentary way, especially to request to come or go to some place, gathering, entertainment, etc., or to do something: to invite friends to dinner.
  • invocate — invoke.
  • involute — intricate; complex.
  • ipsative — (psychology) denoting a measure that forces an individual to choose among multiple desirable options.
  • izvestia — (formerly) the official newspaper of the Soviet government.
  • jehovist — Yahwist.
  • kistvaen — cist2 .
  • kristevaJulia, born 1941, French literary theorist, critic, and psychoanalyst, born in Bulgaria.
  • laxative — a medicine or agent for relieving constipation.
  • lenitive — softening, soothing, or mitigating, as medicines or applications.
  • levation — The act of raising; elevation or upward motion, such as that produced by the action of a levator muscle.
  • levigate — to rub, grind, or reduce to a fine powder, as in a mortar, with or without the addition of a liquid.
  • levirate — the custom of marriage by a man with his brother's widow, such marriage required in Biblical law if the deceased was childless. Deut. 25:5–10.
  • levitate — to rise or float in the air, especially as a result of a supernatural power that overcomes gravity.
  • listserv — any similar software program.
  • live out — residing away from the place of one's employment: a live-out cook.
  • live-out — residing away from the place of one's employment: a live-out cook.
  • livetrap — a trap for capturing a wild animal alive and without injury.
  • locative — (in certain inflected languages) noting a case whose distinctive function is to indicate place in or at which, as Latin domī “at home.”.
  • lovebite — Alternative spelling of love bite.
  • might've — Might've is the usual spoken form of 'might have', especially when 'have' is an auxiliary verb.
  • minivets — Plural form of minivet.
  • misevent — an event that does not take place as expected or planned
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