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13-letter words containing f, a, v

  • above oneself — presumptuous or conceited
  • active filter — An active filter is any filter using an op amp.
  • active safety — the practice of taking measures to avoid accidents, as opposed to merely reducing their consequences
  • additive-free — (of food) not containing any chemical additives
  • advection fog — fog caused by the movement of warm, moist air over a cold surface.
  • affectiveness — The property of being affective.
  • affirmatively — affirming or assenting; asserting the truth, validity, or fact of something.
  • amplificative — Amplificatory.
  • angle of view — the angle that corresponds to the field of view provided by a lens
  • antiinfective — Antiinfection.
  • antireflexive — noting a relation in which no element is in relation to itself, as “less than.”.
  • at face value — If you take something at face value, you accept it and believe it without thinking about it very much, even though it might be untrue.
  • aviation fuel — fuel used to power airplanes
  • boniface viii — original name Benedict Caetano. ?1234–1303, pope (1294–1303)
  • buffalo grove — a city in NE Illinois.
  • carving knife — A carving knife is a long sharp knife that is used to cut cooked meat.
  • city of david — Jerusalem. II Sam. 5:6–7.
  • confederative — of confederates or a confederation
  • configurative — the relative disposition or arrangement of the parts or elements of a thing.
  • conflagrative — That produces conflagration.
  • confrontative — tending toward or ready for confrontation: They came to the meeting with a confrontational attitude.
  • contrafactive — Denoting a verb that assigns to its object (normally a clausal object) the status of not being true, e.g., pretend and wish.
  • cut-off valve — a valve that terminates the flow of fluid in a system
  • diversifiable — to make diverse, as in form or character; give variety or diversity to; variegate.
  • draft version — a preliminary version
  • face validity — the extent to which a psychological test appears to measure what it is intended to measure
  • facultatively — In a facultative manner.
  • fairview park — a city in N Ohio.
  • false vampire — any large, carnivorous bat of the families Megadermatidae and Phyllostomatidae, of Africa, Asia, and Australia, erroneously reputed to suck the blood of animals and humans.
  • family values — belief in traditional family unit
  • fast dissolve — a transition that fades out one scene and replaces it with another, merging the two scenes imperceptibly
  • favorableness — Alternative spelling of favourableness.
  • favrile glass — a type of iridescent glass developed by L.C. Tiffany
  • ferdinand vii — 1784–1833, king of Spain 1808, 1814–33.
  • ferrovanadium — a ferroalloy containing up to 55 percent vanadium.
  • festival hall — a concert hall in London, on the South Bank of the Thames: constructed for the 1951 Festival of Britain; completed 1964–65
  • festivalgoers — Plural form of festivalgoer.
  • fever therapy — therapy by means of an artificially induced fever.
  • fibrovascular — composed of fibrous and conductive tissue, as in the vascular systems of higher plants: a fibrovascular bundle.
  • film festival — a festival devoted to film
  • fingal's cave — a cave on the island of Staffa, in the Hebrides, Scotland. 227 feet (69 meters) long; 42 feet (13 meters) wide.
  • five-and-dime — a shop that sells a wide variety of things at a cheap price
  • five-day week — a system in which people work for five days in every seven
  • flavoproteins — Plural form of flavoprotein.
  • flavopurpurin — a yellow, crystalline anthraquinone dye, C 14 H 8 O 5 , isomeric with purpurin.
  • fleming valve — (formerly) a diode.
  • floating vote — those voters collectively who are not permanently attached to any political party.
  • flow cleavage — cleavage resulting from the parallel alignment of the mineral constituents of a rock when in a plastic condition.
  • food additive — additive (def 4).
  • for values of — (jargon)   A common rhetorical maneuver at MIT is to use any of the canonical random numbers as placeholders for variables. "The max function takes 42 arguments, for arbitrary values of 42". "There are 69 ways to leave your lover, for 69 = 50". This is especially likely when the speaker has uttered a random number and realises that it was not recognised as such, but even "non-random" numbers are occasionally used in this fashion. A related joke is that pi equals 3 - for small values of pi and large values of 3. This usage probably derives from the programming language MAD (Michigan Algorithm Decoder), an ALGOL-like language that was the most common choice among mainstream (non-hacker) users at MIT in the mid-1960s. It had a control structure FOR VALUES OF X = 3, 7, 99 DO ... that would repeat the indicated instructions for each value in the list (unlike the usual FOR that generates an arithmetic sequence of values). MAD is long extinct, but similar for-constructs still flourish (e.g. in Unix's shell languages).

On this page, we collect all 13-letter words with F-A-V. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 13-letter word that contains in F-A-V to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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