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7-letter words containing i, t, v

  • tortive — twisted
  • torvill — a British ice dancer, Jayne Torvill, born 1957. Together with her ice skating partner, Christopher Dean, she won the world championships in 1981–84, the European championships in 1981–82, 1984, and 1994, and the gold medal in the 1984 Olympic Games
  • travail — painfully difficult or burdensome work; toil.
  • travois — a transport device, formerly used by the Plains Indians, consisting of two poles joined by a frame and drawn by an animal.
  • trevinoLee ("Super Mex") born 1939, U.S. golfer.
  • treviso — a city in NE Italy.
  • treviss — a partition in a stable for keeping animals apart
  • trivial — of very little importance or value; insignificant: Don't bother me with trivial matters.
  • trivias — (in Roman religion) Hecate: so called because she was the goddess of the crossroads.
  • trivium — (during the Middle Ages) the lower division of the seven liberal arts, comprising grammar, rhetoric, and logic.
  • tussive — of or relating to a cough.
  • unitive — capable of causing unity or serving to unite.
  • unrivet — to undo or loosen the rivets of
  • unvital — not vital or crucial; unessential; unnecessary
  • ustinov — Sir Peter (Alexander). 1921–2004, British stage and film actor, director, dramatist, and raconteur
  • uveitic — inflammation of the uvea.
  • uveitis — inflammation of the uvea.
  • v joint — an angular, hollow mortar joint.
  • v-eight — noting an internal-combustion engine having two opposed banks of four cylinders, each inclined so that the axes of the cylinders form a V -shaped angle as seen from the end of the engine.
  • vacuist — a person who believes in the existence of vacuums between molecules and atoms of matter or between bodies of the universe
  • vacuity — the state of being vacuous or without contents; vacancy; emptiness: the vacuity of the open sea.
  • vagitus — a new-born baby's first cry
  • vainest — excessively proud of or concerned about one's own appearance, qualities, achievements, etc.; conceited: a vain dandy.
  • valiant — boldly courageous; brave; stout-hearted: a valiant soldier.
  • vanitas — a type of still-life painting that flourished in the Netherlands from about 1620 to 1650, conveying a religious message and characterized by objects symbolic of mortality and the meaninglessness of worldly pleasures.
  • variant — tending to change or alter; exhibiting variety or diversity; varying: variant shades of color.
  • variate — Statistics. random variable.
  • variety — the state of being varied or diversified: to give variety to a diet.
  • varmint — Chiefly Southern and South Midland U.S. vermin. an objectionable or undesirable animal, usually predatory, as a coyote or bobcat.
  • varsity — any first-string team, especially in sports, that represents a school, college, university, or the like: He is on the varsity in tennis and in debating.
  • vastity — immensity; vastness.
  • vatican — Second Vatican Council.
  • vatting — a large container, as a tub or tank, used for storing or holding liquids: a wine vat.
  • vection — the transference of a disease from one person to another.
  • veinlet — a small vein.
  • velites — light-armed troops in ancient Rome, drawn from the poorer classes
  • venatic — of or relating to hunting.
  • venetia — an ancient district in NE Italy: later a Roman province bounded by the Alps, the Po River, and the Adriatic Sea.
  • venetic — an Indo-European language of NE Italy, possibly belonging to the Italic branch, known from inscriptions from the 4th to 2nd centuries b.c.
  • ventail — the pivoted middle element of a face defense of a close helmet.
  • venting — the act of venting or expressing emotion
  • ventri- — ventro-
  • ventrisMichael George Francis, 1922–56, English architect and linguist.
  • venturiRobert Charles, born 1925, U.S. architect.
  • verdict — Law. the finding or answer of a jury given to the court concerning a matter submitted to their judgment.
  • verdite — a type of rare green rock used in jewellery
  • veriest — precise; particular: That is the very item we want.
  • veritas — truth.
  • vertigo — a dizzying sensation of tilting within stable surroundings or of being in tilting or spinning surroundings.
  • vestige — a mark, trace, or visible evidence of something that is no longer present or in existence: A few columns were the last vestiges of a Greek temple.
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