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11-letter words containing i, v, t, r

  • intrusively — tending or apt to intrude; coming without invitation or welcome: intrusive memories of a lost love.
  • invalidator — One who, or that which, makes invalid.
  • invariantly — unvarying; invariable; constant.
  • inventorial — a complete listing of merchandise or stock on hand, work in progress, raw materials, finished goods on hand, etc., made each year by a business concern.
  • inventoried — a complete listing of merchandise or stock on hand, work in progress, raw materials, finished goods on hand, etc., made each year by a business concern.
  • inventories — Plural form of inventory.
  • inventorize — (transitive, nonstandard) To make an inventory of.
  • invert soap — cationic detergent.
  • invertebrae — Invertebrate organisms.
  • invertebral — invertebrate
  • investiture — the act or process of investing.
  • invigilator — to keep watch.
  • invigorated — Give strength or energy to.
  • invigorates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of invigorate.
  • invigorator — One who, or that which, invigorates.
  • invigourate — Alternative spelling of invigorate.
  • involucrate — having an involucre.
  • involuntary — not voluntary; independent of one's will; not by one's own choice: an involuntary listener; involuntary servitude.
  • irradiative — That irradiates.
  • irreceptive — not receptive
  • irretentive — not retentive; lacking power to retain, especially mentally.
  • iteratively — repeating; making repetition; repetitious.
  • ivory coast — a republic in W Africa: formerly part of French West Africa; gained independence 1960. 127,520 sq. mi. (330,275 sq. km). Capital: Abidjan.
  • ivory tower — a place or situation remote from worldly or practical affairs: the university as an ivory tower.
  • ivory trade — the (esp illegal) trade in the ivory of the tusks of elephants, walruses, and similar animals
  • ivory-white — of a creamy or yellowish white in color.
  • kantorovich — Leonid Vitalyevich [ley-uh-nid vi-tal-yuh-vich;; Russian lyi-uh-nyeet vyi-tah-lyuh-vyich] /ˈleɪ ə nɪd vɪˈtæl yə vɪtʃ;; Russian lyɪ ʌˈnyit vyɪˈtɑ lyə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1912–86, Soviet mathematician and economist: Nobel Prize in Economics 1975.
  • la traviata — an opera (1853) by Giuseppe Verdi.
  • latin lover — seductive Latin American man
  • light curve — a graph showing variations in brightness of celestial objects over time.
  • light verse — verse that is written to entertain, amuse, or please, often by the subtlety of its form rather than by its literary quality.
  • line starve — (MIT, opposite of line feed) 1. To feed paper through a printer the wrong way by one line (most printers can't do this). On a display terminal, to move the cursor up to the previous line of the screen. "To print "X squared", you just output "X", line starve, "2", line feed." (The line starve causes the "2" to appear on the line above the "X", and the line feed gets back to the original line.) 2. A character (or character sequence) that causes a terminal to perform this action. ASCII 26, also called SUB or control-Z, was one common line-starve character in the days before microcomputers and the X3.64 terminal standard. Unlike "line feed", "line starve" is *not* standard ASCII terminology. Even among hackers it is considered silly. 3. (Proposed) A sequence such as \c (used in System V echo, as well as nroff and troff) that suppresses a newline or other character(s) that would normally be emitted.
  • line vector — a vector having specified magnitude and lying on a given line.
  • live center — Geometry. the middle point, as the point within a circle or sphere equally distant from all points of the circumference or surface, or the point within a regular polygon equally distant from the vertices.
  • live centre — a conically pointed rod mounted in the headstock of a lathe that locates and turns with the workpiece
  • liver salts — a preparation of mineral salts used to treat indigestion
  • liver spots — a form of chloasma in which irregularly shaped light-brown spots occur on the skin.
  • locorestive — having a tendency to rest in one place
  • lubavitcher — a member of a missionary Hasidic movement founded in the 1700s by Rabbi Shneour Zalman of Lyady.
  • lucratively — In a lucrative manner, profitably.
  • maidservant — a female servant.
  • margraviate — Alternative spelling of margravate.
  • mars violet — a dark grayish-purple color.
  • meliorative — That meliorates; curative, salutary.
  • mensurative — adapted for or concerned with measuring.
  • miscreative — creating evil
  • mont cervinMont [mawn] /mɔ̃/ (Show IPA). French name of the Matterhorn.
  • most-livery — liverish.
  • motor drive — a mechanical system, including an electric motor, used to operate a machine or machines.
  • movie actor — film star
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