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10-letter words containing n, i, e, v

  • unliveable — livable.
  • unplausive — not applauding; disapproving
  • unprovided — not provided or supplied
  • unraveling — to separate or disentangle the threads of (a woven or knitted fabric, a rope, etc.).
  • unravished — to rape (a woman).
  • unreactive — tending to react.
  • unreceived — (of the Eucharist) not taken or received
  • unrelative — a person who is connected with another or others by blood or marriage.
  • unrelieved — to ease or alleviate (pain, distress, anxiety, need, etc.).
  • unreviewed — a critical article or report, as in a periodical, on a book, play, recital, or the like; critique; evaluation.
  • unrivalled — having no rival or competitor; having no equal; incomparable; supreme: His work is unrivaled for the beauty of its prose.
  • unserviced — an act of helpful activity; help; aid: to do someone a service.
  • unswerving — to turn aside abruptly in movement or direction; deviate suddenly from the straight or direct course.
  • unvariable — invariable; unchangeable or unchanging
  • unvendible — not vendible or saleable; that cannot be vended or sold
  • unveracity — lack of veracity or truthfulness; the quality or condition of tending to speak what is false
  • unverified — confirmed as to accuracy or truth by acceptable evidence, action, etc.
  • unviewable — capable of being viewed; visible.
  • unviolated — not violated or desecrated
  • unvitiated — not vitiated; unsullied; uncorrupted; pure
  • unwavering — to sway to and fro; flutter: Foliage wavers in the breeze.
  • vacationer — a period of suspension of work, study, or other activity, usually used for rest, recreation, or travel; recess or holiday: Schoolchildren are on vacation now.
  • vagrancies — the conduct of a vagrant.
  • valentinus — Valentine (def 2).
  • van driver — a person whose occupation is driving a van
  • vanadinite — a mineral, Pb 5 (VO 4) 3 Cl, occurring in yellow, brown, or greenish crystals: an ore of lead and vanadium.
  • vanderbiltCornelius, 1794–1877, U.S. financier.
  • vanishment — to disappear from sight, especially quickly; become invisible: The frost vanished when the sun came out.
  • vanquished — to conquer or subdue by superior force, as in battle.
  • vanquisher — to conquer or subdue by superior force, as in battle.
  • vaticinate — to foretell; prophesy
  • vegetarian — a person who does not eat or does not believe in eating meat, fish, fowl, or, in some cases, any food derived from animals, as eggs or cheese, but subsists on vegetables, fruits, nuts, grain, etc.
  • vegetation — all the plants or plant life of a place, taken as a whole: the vegetation of the Nile valley.
  • velitation — a minor dispute or contest.
  • velutinous — having a soft, velvety surface, as certain plants.
  • venatorial — of or relating to hunting
  • veneration — the act of venerating.
  • venerative — the act of venerating.
  • venial sin — a transgression against the law of God that does not deprive the soul of divine grace either because it is a minor offense or because it was committed without full understanding of its seriousness or without full consent of the will.
  • venialness — the quality or state of being venial
  • venostasis — retardation or stoppage of blood flow through a vein.
  • ventilated — to provide (a room, mine, etc.) with fresh air in place of air that has been used or contaminated.
  • ventilator — a person or thing that ventilates.
  • ventricles — Zoology. any of various hollow organs or parts in an animal body.
  • ventricose — swollen, especially on one side or unequally; protuberant.
  • ventriculi — the part of the food tract in which digestion takes place, especially the lower cavity of a compound stomach in insects.
  • vermilling — changing or becoming the colour vermilion
  • vermillion — a brilliant scarlet red.
  • vernissage — Also called varnishing day. the day before the opening of an art exhibition traditionally reserved for the artist to varnish the paintings.
  • versioning — the adaptation of classic literary texts for film, which often involves updating or changing the setting
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