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11-letter words containing l, a, v, t, i

  • facultative — conferring a faculty, privilege, permission, or the power of doing or not doing something: a facultative enactment.
  • flat silver — silver table utensils, as knives, forks, and spoons.
  • fluvastatin — A drug of the statin class, used to treat hypercholesterolemia and to prevent cardiovascular disease.
  • galavanting — to wander about, seeking pleasure or diversion; gad.
  • gallivanted — Simple past tense and past participle of gallivant.
  • gallivanter — to wander about, seeking pleasure or diversion; gad.
  • give battle — to commence fighting
  • groin-vault — a vault or ceiling created by the intersection of vaults.
  • heavenliest — Superlative form of heavenly.
  • hiv-related — related to the HIV virus
  • humiliative — to cause (a person) a painful loss of pride, self-respect, or dignity; mortify.
  • hyattsville — a city in central Maryland.
  • illuviation — the accumulation in one layer of soil of materials that have been leached out of another layer.
  • imitatively — In an imitative manner.
  • imperatival — of, relating to, or characteristic of the grammatical imperative.
  • implicative — tending to implicate or imply; characterized by or involving implication.
  • inavertible — Not avertible.
  • inculcative — to implant by repeated statement or admonition; teach persistently and earnestly (usually followed by upon or in): to inculcate virtue in the young.
  • inevitables — Plural form of inevitable.
  • infinitival — of or relating to the infinitive.
  • inoculative — to implant (a disease agent or antigen) in a person, animal, or plant to produce a disease for study or to stimulate disease resistance.
  • interleaved — Simple past tense and past participle of interleave.
  • interleaves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of interleave.
  • intervalley — an elongated depression between uplands, hills, or mountains, especially one following the course of a stream.
  • intervallic — an intervening period of time: an interval of 50 years.
  • intervallum — an interval of time
  • interveinal — one of the system of branching vessels or tubes conveying blood from various parts of the body to the heart.
  • interverbal — of or relating to words: verbal ability.
  • invalidated — Something made invalid.
  • invalidates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of invalidate.
  • invalidator — One who, or that which, makes invalid.
  • invariantly — unvarying; invariable; constant.
  • inventional — the act of inventing.
  • 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.
  • invertebral — invertebrate
  • inviability — (biology) The state or quality of not being viable.
  • invigilated — Simple past tense and past participle of invigilate.
  • invigilates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of invigilate.
  • invigilator — to keep watch.
  • inviolately — In an inviolate manner.
  • involucrate — having an involucre.
  • involuntary — not voluntary; independent of one's will; not by one's own choice: an involuntary listener; involuntary servitude.
  • iteratively — repeating; making repetition; repetitious.
  • kilovoltage — electric potential difference or electromotive force, as measured in kilovolts.
  • la traviata — an opera (1853) by Giuseppe Verdi.
  • lactoflavin — riboflavin.
  • latin lover — seductive Latin American man
  • legislative — having the function of making laws: a legislative body.
  • light valve — a light-transmitting device having transmissions that vary in accordance with an electric input, as voltage, current, or an electron beam, used chiefly for recording sound on motion-picture film.
  • 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.
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