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7-letter words containing r, v

  • stuiver — stiver (def 1).
  • subvert — to overthrow (something established or existing).
  • surveil — to place under surveillance.
  • surview — a survey (with the eyes or mind)
  • survive — to remain alive after the death of someone, the cessation of something, or the occurrence of some event; continue to live: Few survived after the holocaust.
  • suvorov — Aleksandr Vasilevich [uh-lyi-ksahn-dr vuh-syee-lyi-vyich] /ʌ lyɪˈksɑn dr vʌˈsyi lyɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), (Count Suvorov Rumnikski, Prince Itliski) 1729–1800, Russian field marshal.
  • svelter — slender, especially gracefully slender in figure; lithe.
  • sverige — Swedish name of Sweden.
  • taivert — confused; bewildered
  • tardive — appearing or tending to appear late, as in human development or in the treatment of a disease.
  • tavener — Sir John (Kenneth). 1944–2013, English composer, whose works include the cantata The Whale (1966), the opera Thérèse (1979), and the choral work The Last Discourse (1998); many of his later works are inspired by the liturgy of the Russian Orthodox Church
  • taverna — a small, unpretentious café or restaurant in Greece.
  • thriven — to prosper; be fortunate or successful.
  • thriver — to prosper; be fortunate or successful.
  • thrives — to prosper; be fortunate or successful.
  • torsive — twisted
  • tortive — twisted
  • torvill — a British ice dancer, Jayne Torvill, born 1957. Together with her ice skating partner, Christopher Dean, she won the world championships in 1981–84, the European championships in 1981–82, 1984, and 1994, and the gold medal in the 1984 Olympic Games
  • travail — painfully difficult or burdensome work; toil.
  • travers — P(amela) L. 1899–1996, Australian writer, especially of children's stories, in England.
  • travois — a transport device, formerly used by the Plains Indians, consisting of two poles joined by a frame and drawn by an animal.
  • trevinoLee ("Super Mex") born 1939, U.S. golfer.
  • treviso — a city in NE Italy.
  • treviss — a partition in a stable for keeping animals apart
  • trivial — of very little importance or value; insignificant: Don't bother me with trivial matters.
  • trivias — (in Roman religion) Hecate: so called because she was the goddess of the crossroads.
  • trivium — (during the Middle Ages) the lower division of the seven liberal arts, comprising grammar, rhetoric, and logic.
  • twelver — Imamite.
  • tworkovJack, 1900–82, U.S. painter, born in Poland.
  • uncover — to lay bare; disclose; reveal.
  • unnerve — to deprive of courage, strength, determination, or confidence; upset: Fear unnerved him.
  • unravel — to separate or disentangle the threads of (a woven or knitted fabric, a rope, etc.).
  • unreave — to unwind, untangle, or loosen
  • unreeve — Nautical. to withdraw (a rope) from a block, thimble, etc.
  • unriven — not torn apart
  • unrivet — to undo or loosen the rivets of
  • unroven — a past participle of unreeve.
  • unvisor — to remove a visor from
  • upcurve — an upward curve
  • upriver — against a river's current
  • urban v — (Guillaume de Grimoard) c1310–70, French ecclesiastic: pope 1362–70.
  • v. rev. — Very Reverend
  • v.32ter — An extension of the ITU-T V.32bis modem protocol. While waiting for V.34, many modem manufacturers decided to extend V.32bis to 19.2 kbps. This was known as V.32ter which some marketroids rechristened V.32 terbo which is not only misspelled but misses the fact that V.32ter means the third revision of V.32.
  • vacatur — a court announcement saying something is cancelled or annulled
  • vagrant — a person who wanders about idly and has no permanent home or employment; vagabond; tramp.
  • valeric — pertaining to or derived from valerian.
  • valerie — a female given name.
  • vampire — a preternatural being, commonly believed to be a reanimated corpse, that is said to suck the blood of sleeping persons at night.
  • vanward — in or towards the front
  • vaquero — a cowboy or herdsman.
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