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10-letter words containing h, a, v

  • hovercraft — ACV.
  • hovertrain — an experimental high-speed train that rides on a cushion of air over a concrete guide track in the shape of an inverted T and is propelled by one or more propellers or jet engines.
  • hrotsvitha — c935–c1000, German nun, poet, and dramatist.
  • hypernovae — Plural form of hypernova.
  • hypoactive — Less than normally active.
  • inchoative — inceptive.
  • java finch — a finchlike weaverbird, Padda oryzivora, of southeastern Asia, having gray plumage tinged with pink on the belly, often kept as a cage bird.
  • khabarovsk — Formerly Far Eastern Region. a territory of the Russian Federation in NE Asia. 965,400 sq. mi. (2,500,400 sq. km).
  • kirovohrad — Kirovograd.
  • lavishment — The act of lavishing.
  • lavishness — expended, bestowed, or occurring in profusion: lavish spending.
  • leviathans — Plural form of leviathan.
  • light wave — the movement of light conceptualized as a wave, defined by such properties as reflection, refraction, and dispersion
  • lightwaves — Plural form of lightwave.
  • livelihead — vigour or liveliness
  • loch raven — a town in central Maryland, near Baltimore.
  • love match — a marriage entered into for love alone.
  • mahasattva — A bodhisattva who attains a high degree on the path of consciousness awakening.
  • marheshvan — Heshvan.
  • mihailovic — Draža [Serbo-Croatian. drah-zhah] /Serbo-Croatian. ˈdrɑ ʒɑ/ (Show IPA), Mikhailovitch, Draja.
  • misbehaved — Simple past tense and past participle of misbehave.
  • misbehaves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of misbehave.
  • nicholas v — (Thomas Parentucelli) 1397?–1455, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1447–55.
  • outachieve — (transitive) To surpass in achievement; to achieve more than.
  • over-happy — delighted, pleased, or glad, as over a particular thing: to be happy to see a person.
  • overarched — Simple past tense and past participle of overarch.
  • overarches — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of overarch.
  • overbleach — (transitive) To bleach too much.
  • overcharge — to charge (a purchaser) too high a price: When the manager realized we'd been overcharged, she gave us a credit for the difference.
  • overhandle — to handle, or mention, too much
  • overheated — Someone who is overheated is very angry about something.
  • overlaunch — (in shipbuilding) to overlap planks
  • overlavish — expended, bestowed, or occurring in profusion: lavish spending.
  • overrashly — in an overrash manner
  • overshadow — to be more important or significant by comparison: For years he overshadowed his brother.
  • overslaugh — to pass over or disregard (a person) by giving a promotion, position, etc., to another instead.
  • overtaught — taught to excess
  • overthwart — to lie across
  • phomvihane — Kaysone (ˈkaɪsɒn). 1920–92, Laotian Communist statesman; prime minister of Laos (1975–91); president (1991–92)
  • play havoc — to cause a great deal of damage, distress, or confusion (to)
  • preharvest — Also, harvesting. the gathering of crops.
  • ravishment — rapture or ecstasy.
  • revanchism — an advocate or supporter of a political policy of revanche, especially in order to seek vengeance for a previous military defeat.
  • revanchist — an advocate or supporter of a political policy of revanche, especially in order to seek vengeance for a previous military defeat.
  • river head — the source of a river
  • safe haven — an area near a combat zone that is maintained as being free from military attack.
  • shock wave — a region of abrupt change of pressure and density moving as a wave front at or above the velocity of sound, caused by an intense explosion or supersonic flow over a body.
  • short wave — Electricity. a radio wave, shorter than that used in AM broadcasting, corresponding to frequencies of over 1600 kilohertz: used for long-distance reception or transmission.
  • short-wave — Electricity. a radio wave, shorter than that used in AM broadcasting, corresponding to frequencies of over 1600 kilohertz: used for long-distance reception or transmission.
  • shovel hat — a hat with a broad brim turned up at the sides and projecting with a shovellike curve in front and behind; worn by some ecclesiastics, chiefly in England.
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