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10-letter words containing l, a, t, r, v, i

  • revitalise — to give new life to.
  • revitalize — to give new life to.
  • revivalist — a person, especially a member of the clergy, who promotes or holds religious revivals.
  • salt river — a river flowing W from E Arizona to the Gila River near Phoenix: Roosevelt Dam. 200 miles (322 km) long.
  • shrievalty — the office, term, or jurisdiction of a sheriff.
  • silvertail — a person of affluence or influence.
  • starkville — a town in E Mississippi.
  • starveling — a person, animal, or plant that is starving.
  • supravital — pertaining to or involving a staining method for a preparation of living cells.
  • the-rivals — a comedy of manners (1775) by Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
  • tolerative — to allow the existence, presence, practice, or act of without prohibition or hindrance; permit.
  • travailing — painfully difficult or burdensome work; toil.
  • travelling — to go from one place to another, as by car, train, plane, or ship; take a trip; journey: to travel for pleasure.
  • triumviral — of a triumvir or triumvirate
  • trivialise — to make trivial; cause to appear unimportant, trifling, etc.
  • trivialism — trivial character.
  • trivialist — someone who deals with or is interested in trivialities
  • triviality — something trivial; a trivial matter, affair, remark, etc.: cocktail conversation marked by trivialities.
  • trivialize — to make trivial; cause to appear unimportant, trifling, etc.
  • trouvaille — a windfall
  • ulcerative — causing ulceration.
  • ultravirus — filterable virus.
  • unrelative — a person who is connected with another or others by blood or marriage.
  • vacillator — to waver in mind or opinion; be indecisive or irresolute: His tendency to vacillate makes him a poor leader.
  • vanderbiltCornelius, 1794–1877, U.S. financier.
  • variolator — (before the introduction of vaccinations) someone who caused exposure to the smallpox virus to people (by, for example, collecting pus of affected patients) so as to promote immunity
  • variolitic — Petrography. containing or resembling varioles, especially in texture.
  • venatorial — of or relating to hunting
  • ventilator — a person or thing that ventilates.
  • vertically — being in a position or direction perpendicular to the plane of the horizon; upright; plumb.
  • vestibular — of, relating to, or resembling a vestibule.
  • victualler — a person who furnishes victuals, especially a sutler.
  • violet ray — the shortest ray of the visible spectrum
  • virtualism — the teaching that the bread and wine of the Communion contain Christ's spiritual body and blood
  • virtualist — an artist specializing in virtual art, for example, art on the internet rather than hard copies of paintings
  • virtuality — being such in power, force, or effect, though not actually or expressly such: a virtual dependence on charity.
  • virtualize — to create a virtual version of (a computer, operating system, data storage device, etc.), which is not itself an independent device but both works and appears to the user as a single, physical entity: A virtualized computer server can boost processing power and reduce costs.
  • visitorial — of or relating to a visitor; visitatorial.
  • vitrailled — characterized by the presence of stained-glass windows
  • vitriolate — relating to vitriol
  • volitorial — relating to flying
  • voltairian — (François Marie Arouet) 1694–1778, French philosopher, historian, satirist, dramatist, and essayist.
  • vorticella — any ciliated protozoan of the genus Vorticella, having a transparent, bell-shaped body with a retractile stalk.
  • waterville — a city in SW Maine.
  • watervliet — a city in E New York, on the Hudson: oldest U.S. arsenal.
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