11-letter words containing f, e, v
- overfatigue — excessive tiredness from which recuperation is difficult.
- overfeeding — the act of feeding too much
- overfishing — to fish (an area) excessively; to exhaust the supply of usable fish in (certain waters): Scientists are concerned that fishing boats may overfish our coastal waters.
- overflooded — a great flowing or overflowing of water, especially over land not usually submerged.
- overflowing — to flow or run over, as rivers or water: After the thaw, the river overflows and causes great damage.
- overforward — too familiar
- overfraught — too fraught
- overfreedom — the state of being too forward, free, or liberal
- overfreight — to load too heavily
- overfulness — the state of being too full
- overfunding — a supply of money or pecuniary resources, as for some purpose: a fund for his education; a retirement fund.
- overinflate — to inflate to an excessive degree
- overperform — to carry out; execute; do: to perform miracles.
- overstaffed — If you say that a place is overstaffed, you think there are more people working there than is necessary.
- overstuffed — stuffed or filled to excess.
- ovuliferous — holding ovules
- perforative — that perforates readily
- profusively — profuse; lavish; prodigal: profusive generosity.
- provide for — support financially
- reflexively — Grammar. (of a verb) taking a subject and object with identical referents, as shave in I shave myself. (of a pronoun) used as an object to refer to the subject of a verb, as myself in I shave myself.
- reflexivize — to make (a verb or pronoun) reflexive.
- reformative — the improvement or amendment of what is wrong, corrupt, unsatisfactory, etc.: social reform; spelling reform.
- rift valley — graben.
- rostovtzeff — Michael Ivanovich [mahy-kuh l i-vah-nuh-vich] /ˈmaɪ kəl ɪˈvɑ nə vɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1870–1952, U.S. historian, born in Russia.
- run a fever — have a high temperature
- sea of azov — a shallow arm of the Black Sea, to which it is connected by the Kerch Strait: almost entirely landlocked; fed chiefly by the River Don. Area: about 37 500 sq km (14 500 sq miles)
- self-avowed — acknowledged; declared: an avowed enemy.
- self-driven — (of a machine) containing its own power source, as an engine or motor.
- self-giving — to present voluntarily and without expecting compensation; bestow: to give a birthday present to someone.
- self-moving — capable of moving without an external agency.
- server farm — a collection of computer servers (usually in a business, organization, etc) used to accomplish tasks for which multiple machines are needed
- severalfold — comprising several parts or members.
- shaft grave — a grave consisting of a deep, rectangular pit with vertical sides, roofed over with a stone slab.
- shift lever — the lever mounted on the steering column or floor of a vehicle that enables the driver to shift gears.
- silver fern — a formalized spray of fern leaf, silver on a black background: the symbol of New Zealand sporting teams, esp the All Blacks
- silver fizz — an alcoholic drink made with gin, lemon juice, sugar, and egg white.
- silver foil — silver or silver-colored metal in foil form.
- silver leaf — silver in the form of very thin foil.
- silver orfe — one of the two varieties of orfe, an aquarium fish
- snail fever — schistosomiasis.
- snuff movie — Slang. a pornographic film that shows an actual murder of one of the performers, as at the end of a sadistic act.
- snuff-movie — Slang. a pornographic film that shows an actual murder of one of the performers, as at the end of a sadistic act.
- swamp fever — leptospirosis.
- swine fever — hog cholera.
- texas fever — babesiosis of cattle.
- the five ks — items traditionally worn or carried by Sikhs, each possessing a symbolic importance
- thirty-five — a cardinal number, 30 plus 5.
- travel film — a filmed documentary showing travel in a certain country or region
- tug-of-love — Journalists sometimes use tug-of-love to refer to a situation in which the parents of a child are divorced and one of the parents tries to get the child from the other, for example by taking him or her illegally.
- twenty-five — a cardinal number, 20 plus 5.