9-letter words containing r, s, v
- gravamens — Plural form of gravamen.
- graveless — having no grave or graves
- graveness — serious or solemn; sober: a grave person; grave thoughts.
- gravesend — a seaport in NW Kent, in SE England, on the Thames River: incorporated into Gravesham 1974.
- gravesham — a borough in NW Kent, in SE England.
- graveside — the area beside a grave.
- gravesite — the site of a grave or graves; a place of burial.
- gravities — Plural form of gravity.
- gravitons — Plural form of graviton.
- grievants — Plural form of grievant.
- grievious — (chiefly, dialectal) Alternative form of grievous.
- grooviest — Superlative form of groovy.
- grosvenor — Gilbert Hovey, 1875–1966, U.S. geographer, writer, and editor.
- groveless — having no groves
- guevarist — a supporter of the revolutionary theories and tactics of Ernesto Guevara.
- handovers — Plural form of handover.
- hangovers — Plural form of hangover.
- harvest c — A C compiler, assembler and linker for the Macintosh by Eric W. Sink. The parts of the system are integrated in a single application, which manages a "project" composed by several C source files and resource files (which contain data). Version 1.3.
- harvested — Also, harvesting. the gathering of crops.
- harvester — a person who harvests; reaper.
- hash over — a dish of diced or chopped meat and often vegetables, as of leftover corned beef or veal and potatoes, sautéed in a frying pan or of meat, potatoes, and carrots cooked together in gravy.
- haversack — a single-strapped bag worn over one shoulder and used for carrying supplies.
- haversian — designating or of the canals through which blood vessels and connective tissue pass in bone
- haversine — one half the versed sine of a given angle or arc.
- havildars — Plural form of havildar.
- heyrovsky — Jaroslav [yah-raw-slahf] /ˈyɑ rɔ slɑf/ (Show IPA), 1890–1967, Czech chemist: Nobel Prize 1959.
- hilversum — a city in central Netherlands.
- holdovers — Plural form of holdover.
- howsoever — to whatsoever extent or degree.
- immersive — noting or relating to digital technology or images that actively engage one's senses and may create an altered mental state: immersive media; immersive 3D environments.
- improvise — to compose and perform or deliver without previous preparation; extemporize: to improvise an acceptance speech.
- improviso — (obsolete) Not prepared beforehand; unpremeditated; extemporaneous.
- incursive — making incursions.
- indeavors — Plural form of indeavor.
- insertive — Of or relating to insertion in sexual acts.
- inservice — taking place while one is employed: an in-service training program.
- intervals — Plural form of interval.
- intrusive — tending or apt to intrude; coming without invitation or welcome: intrusive memories of a lost love.
- inventors — Plural form of inventor.
- inverness — Also called Invernessshire [in-ver-nes-sheer, -sher] /ˌɪn vərˈnɛs ʃɪər, -ʃər/ (Show IPA). a historic county in NW Scotland.
- inversely — in an inverse manner.
- inversing — reversed in position, order, direction, or tendency.
- inversion — an act or instance of inverting.
- inversive — noting, pertaining to, or characterized by inversion.
- invertase — an enzyme, occurring in yeast and in the digestive juices of animals, that causes the inversion of cane sugar into invert sugar.
- inverters — Plural form of inverter.
- investors — Plural form of investor.
- investure — (obsolete) To clothe; to invest.
- karsavina — Tamara [tuh-mah-ruh] /təˈmɑ rə/ (Show IPA), 1885–1978, Russian dancer.
- kolozsvar — Hungarian name of Cluj-Napoca.