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7-letter words containing r, v

  • rsvp'ed — to reply to an invitation: Don't forget to RSVP before Thursday.
  • rsvping — to reply to an invitation: Don't forget to RSVP before Thursday.
  • rt revd — Right Reverend
  • rublyov — Andrey (ˈandre). ?1370–1430, Russian icon painter. His masterpiece is The Old Testament Trinity
  • runover — the amount of type matter for a given article, story, etc., that is carried over to another page, column, or line.
  • rustavi — a city in the SE Georgian Republic, SE of Tbilisi.
  • s-curve — a curve shaped like an S .
  • samovar — a metal urn, used especially by Russians for heating water for making tea.
  • saratov — a city in the SW Russian Federation in Europe, on the Volga.
  • savarin — a spongelike cake leavened with yeast, baked in a ring mold, and often soaked with a rum syrup.
  • saviour — a person who saves, rescues, or delivers: the savior of the country.
  • savored — the quality in a substance that affects the sense of taste or of smell.
  • savoury — pleasant or agreeable in taste or smell: a savory aroma.
  • savvier — experienced, knowledgable, and well-informed; shrewd (often used in combination): consumers who are savvy about prices; a tech-savvy entrepreneur.
  • scarves — a plural of scarf1 .
  • screeve — to write, often referring to the writing of begging letters
  • scrieve — to glide or walk along smoothly
  • serovar — serotype
  • servant — a person employed by another, especially to perform domestic duties.
  • servery — Chiefly British. a food counter in a cafeteria or pub.
  • service — Robert W(illiam) 1874–1958, Canadian writer, born in England.
  • servile — slavishly submissive or obsequious; fawning: servile flatterers.
  • serving — the act, manner, or right of serving, as in tennis.
  • servite — a member of an order of mendicant friars, founded in Florence in 1233, engaged in fostering devotion to the Virgin Mary.
  • servlet — a small program that runs on a web server, often accessing databases in response to client input
  • servoed — acting as part of a servomechanism: servo amplifier.
  • sevener — Ismaʿilian.
  • several — being more than two but fewer than many in number or kind: several ways of doing it.
  • severed — to separate (a part) from the whole, as by cutting or the like.
  • severer — harsh; unnecessarily extreme: severe criticism; severe laws.
  • severus — Lucius Septimius [sep-tim-ee-uh s] /sɛpˈtɪm i əs/ (Show IPA), a.d. 146–211, Roman emperor 193–211.
  • sevruga — a species of sturgeon, Acipenser stellatus, of the Caspian and Black seas.
  • shivers — an attack of shivering, esp caused by fear or illness
  • shivery — readily breaking into shivers or fragments; brittle.
  • shrieve — sheriff.
  • shrivel — shrink, dry up
  • shriven — a past participle of shrive.
  • shriver — (Robert) Sargent, Jr [sahr-juh nt] /ˈsɑr dʒənt/ (Show IPA), 1915–2011, U.S. businessman and government official: first director of the U.S. Peace Corps, 1961–66.
  • sievers — Eduard [ey-doo-ahrt] /ˈeɪ du ɑrt/ (Show IPA), 1850–1932, German philologist.
  • sievert — the standard unit in the International System of Units (SI) of dose equivalent having the same biological effect as one joule of x-rays per kilogram of recipient mass (or one gray): The average person receives about 2 to 3 one-thousandths of a sievert per year from naturally occurring radiation in the environment. Abbreviation: Sv.
  • silvern — made of or like silver.
  • silvery — resembling silver; of a lustrous grayish-white color: the silvery moon.
  • slavery — the condition of a slave; bondage.
  • sleever — a measure of beer, equal to about three-quarters of a pint
  • sparver — a tentlike bed curtain or canopy.
  • strayve — to wander aimlessly
  • strived — to exert oneself vigorously; try hard: He strove to make himself understood.
  • striven — to exert oneself vigorously; try hard: He strove to make himself understood.
  • striver — to exert oneself vigorously; try hard: He strove to make himself understood.
  • strives — vigorous or bitter conflict, discord, or antagonism: to be at strife.
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