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11-letter words containing l, i, v, n, g

  • innavigable — unable to be navigated
  • innavigably — in an innavigable manner
  • invaginable — capable of being invaginated; susceptible of invagination.
  • invigilated — Simple past tense and past participle of invigilate.
  • invigilates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of invigilate.
  • invigilator — to keep watch.
  • king's evil — scrofula: so called because it was supposed to be curable by the touch of the reigning sovereign.
  • laborsaving — designed or intended to reduce or replace human labor: The dishwasher is a laborsaving device.
  • landgravine — the wife of a landgrave.
  • life-giving — imparting, or having the ability to impart, life or vitality; invigorating; vitalizing: life-giving love and praise.
  • life-saving — a person who rescues another from danger of death, especially from drowning.
  • lignivorous — xylophagous.
  • living bank — a facility in which donated human organs or tissues are preserved for subsequent transplantation.
  • living dead — people who are very dull and boring
  • living hell — If you describe a place or situation as a living hell, you are emphasizing that it is extremely unpleasant.
  • living room — a room in a home used, especially by a family, for leisure activities, entertaining guests, etc.; parlor.
  • living soul — person
  • living unit — a dwelling intended for use by one household.
  • living wage — a wage on which it is possible for a wage earner or an individual and his or her family to live at least according to minimum customary standards.
  • living will — a document instructing physicians, relatives, or others to refrain from the use of extraordinary measures, as life-support equipment, to prolong one's life in the event of a terminal illness.
  • livingstoneDavid, 1813–73, Scottish missionary and explorer in Africa.
  • longevities — Plural form of longevity.
  • moving coil — denoting an electromechanical device in which a suspended coil is free to move in a magnetic field. A current passing through the coil causes it to move, as in loudspeakers and electrical measuring instruments, or movement of the coil gives rise to induced currents, as in microphones and some record-player pick-ups
  • navigatable — Navigable.
  • observingly — Attentively, observantly.
  • olive green — dull yellowish-green colour
  • orangeville — a town in SE Ontario, in S Canada.
  • overblowing — A technique for playing a wind instrument so as to produce overtones.
  • overflowing — to flow or run over, as rivers or water: After the thaw, the river overflows and causes great damage.
  • overindulge — eat, do to excess
  • overlapping — to lap over (something else or each other); extend over and cover a part of; imbricate.
  • overloading — (language)   (Or "Operator overloading"). Use of a single symbol to represent operators with different argument types, e.g. "-", used either, as a monadic operator to negate an expression, or as a dyadic operator to return the difference between two expressions. Another example is "+" used to add either integers or floating-point numbers. Overloading is also known as ad-hoc polymorphism. User-defined operator overloading is provided by several modern programming languages, e.g. C++'s class system and the functional programming language Haskell's type classes. Ad-hoc polymorphism (better described as overloading) is the ability to use the same syntax for objects of different types, e.g. "+" for addition of reals and integers or "-" for unary negation or diadic subtraction. Parametric polymorphism allows the same object code for a function to handle arguments of many types but overloading only reuses syntax and requires different code to handle different types.
  • overlocking — the act of oversewing a hem or fabric edge to prevent fraying
  • overlooking — to fail to notice, perceive, or consider: to overlook a misspelled word.
  • palsgravine — the wife or widow of a palsgrave.
  • privileging — a right, immunity, or benefit enjoyed only by a person beyond the advantages of most: the privileges of the very rich.
  • quaveringly — In a quavering manner; tremulously.
  • quiveringly — While quivering, or as if quivering.
  • ravishingly — extremely beautiful or attractive; enchanting; entrancing.
  • reprovingly — to criticize or correct, especially gently: to reprove a pupil for making a mistake.
  • revaluating — to make a new or revised valuation of; revalue.
  • self-giving — to present voluntarily and without expecting compensation; bestow: to give a birthday present to someone.
  • self-moving — capable of moving without an external agency.
  • shaving gel — product that softens hair growth for shaving
  • shiveringly — in a shivering manner, usually from cold or fright
  • singulative — a grammatical form or construction that expresses a singular entity or indicates that an individual is singled out from a group, especially as opposed to a collective noun, as snowflake as opposed to snow.
  • slaveringly — in a slavering manner
  • slow-moving — proceeding with or characterized by slow, sluggish, or leisurely movement or activity.
  • sovereignly — a monarch; a king, queen, or other supreme ruler.
  • springville — a town in central Utah.
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