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11-letter words containing o, v, u

  • louis xviii — (Louis Xavier Stanislas) 1755–1824, king of France 1814–15, 1815–24 (brother of Louis XVI).
  • loupcervier — the Canada lynx.
  • lunar rover — a wire-wheeled, battery-powered vehicle used by Apollo astronauts to explore the moon's surface.
  • luoravetlan — Chukotian.
  • manoeuvered — Simple past tense and past participle of manoeuver.
  • manoeuvring — A manoeuvre.
  • marvelously — superb; excellent; great: a marvelous show.
  • mavourneens — Plural form of mavourneen.
  • merdivorous — coprophagous.
  • microvillus — any of the small, fingerlike projections of the surface of an epithelial cell.
  • mischevious — Misconstruction of mischievous.
  • mischievous — maliciously or playfully annoying.
  • mounds view — a town in E Minnesota.
  • moundsville — a city in NW West Virginia, on the Ohio River.
  • move around — be mobile, active
  • movie house — a motion-picture theater.
  • mud volcano — a vent in the earth's surface through which escaping gas and vapor issue, causing mud to boil and occasionally to overflow, forming a conical mound around the vent.
  • multivolume — consisting of or encompassing several volumes: a multivolume encyclopedia.
  • music lover — sb who enjoys listening to music
  • music video — a commercial video featuring a performance of a popular song, often through a stylized dramatization by the performers with lip-syncing and special effects.
  • myxoviruses — Plural form of myxovirus.
  • neoadjuvant — (medicine) Describing an adjuvant preparation given before a course of treatment.
  • nervousness — highly excitable; unnaturally or acutely uneasy or apprehensive: to become nervous under stress.
  • nervuration — the arrangement of the veins in the wing of an insect.
  • neuroactive — affecting or interacting directly with the nervous system
  • non-abusive — using, containing, or characterized by harshly or coarsely insulting language: an abusive author; abusive remarks.
  • non-cursive — (of handwriting) in flowing strokes with the letters joined together.
  • non-obvious — easily seen, recognized, or understood; open to view or knowledge; evident: an obvious advantage.
  • non-vacuous — without contents; empty: the vacuous air.
  • non-viscous — inviscid.
  • nonpunitive — serving for, concerned with, or inflicting punishment: punitive laws; punitive action.
  • nonvascular — pertaining to, composed of, or provided with vessels or ducts that convey fluids, as blood, lymph, or sap.
  • nonvenomous — (of an animal) having a gland or glands for secreting venom; able to inflict a poisoned bite, sting, or wound: a venomous snake.
  • nonvirulent — Not virulent.
  • noroviruses — Plural form of norovirus.
  • nova iguacu — a city in SE Brazil, NW of Rio de Janeiro.
  • objurgative — That objurgates; sharply disapproving.
  • obliviously — unmindful; unconscious; unaware (usually followed by of or to): She was oblivious of his admiration.
  • obstructive — to block or close up with an obstacle; make difficult to pass: Debris obstructed the road.
  • obtrusively — having or showing a disposition to obtrude, as by imposing oneself or one's opinions on others.
  • obviousness — The characteristic of being obvious.
  • omnivourous — Misspelling of omnivorous.
  • oncoviruses — Plural form of oncovirus.
  • outmaneuver — to outwit, defeat, or frustrate by maneuvering.
  • ov language — a type of language that has direct objects preceding the verb and that tends to have typological traits such as postpositions, suffixes, noun modifiers preceding nouns, adverbs preceding verbs, and auxiliary verbs following main verbs.
  • over-assume — to take for granted or without proof: to assume that everyone wants peace. Synonyms: suppose, presuppose; postulate, posit.
  • over-budget — costing or being more than the amount alloted or budgeted: The building is half-finished and it's already overbudget.
  • over-joyous — joyful; happy; jubilant: the joyous sounds of children at play.
  • overanxious — excessively anxious.
  • overarousal — to stir to action or strong response; excite: to arouse a crowd; to arouse suspicion.
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