0%

7-letter words containing s, a, v

  • savable — to rescue from danger or possible harm, injury, or loss: to save someone from drowning.
  • savages — fierce, ferocious, or cruel; untamed: savage beasts.
  • savanna — a plain characterized by coarse grasses and scattered tree growth, especially on the margins of the tropics where the rainfall is seasonal, as in eastern Africa.
  • savarin — a spongelike cake leavened with yeast, baked in a ring mold, and often soaked with a rum syrup.
  • save as — (editor, programming, storage)   A variant of save that saves the current document in an alternative format.
  • save up — put money aside
  • saveloy — a highly seasoned, dried sausage.
  • savigny — Friedrich Karl von (ˈfridrɪç ˈkɑl fɔn). 1779–1861, German legal scholar, who pioneered the historical approach to jurisprudence, emphasizing custom and precedent
  • savings — tending or serving to save; rescuing; preserving.
  • 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.
  • savvies — experienced, knowledgable, and well-informed; shrewd (often used in combination): consumers who are savvy about prices; a tech-savvy entrepreneur.
  • savvily — in a savvy manner
  • scarves — a plural of scarf1 .
  • scavage — a toll charged of merchant strangers by mayors or towns on goods offered or sold in their districts
  • segovia — Andrés [ahn-dres] /ɑnˈdrɛs/ (Show IPA), 1893–87, Spanish guitarist.
  • selvage — the edge of woven fabric finished so as to prevent raveling, often in a narrow tape effect, different from the body of the fabric.
  • serovar — serotype
  • servant — a person employed by another, especially to perform domestic duties.
  • several — being more than two but fewer than many in number or kind: several ways of doing it.
  • sevruga — a species of sturgeon, Acipenser stellatus, of the Caspian and Black seas.
  • shavian — of, relating to, or characteristic of George Bernard Shaw or his works: Shavian humor.
  • shaving — the act, process, or an instance of shaving or being shaved.
  • shavuot — a festival, celebrated on the sixth and seventh days of Sivan by Orthodox and Conservative Jews outside Israel but only on the sixth day by Reform Jews and Jews in Israel, that commemorates God's giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses.
  • sheaves — a pulley for hoisting or hauling, having a grooved rim for retaining a wire rope.
  • silvana — a female given name, form of Silvia or Sylvia.
  • sivaism — the cult of Siva
  • slavery — the condition of a slave; bondage.
  • slaving — a person who is the property of and wholly subject to another; a bond servant.
  • slavish — of or befitting a slave: slavish subjection.
  • slavism — something that is native to, characteristic of, or associated with the Slavs or Slavic.
  • slavist — a specialist in the study of Slavic languages, cultures, etc.
  • slavkov — Czech name of Austerlitz.
  • solvate — a compound formed by the interaction of a solvent and a solute.
  • sparver — a tentlike bed curtain or canopy.
  • stative — (of a verb) expressing a state or condition, as like, want, or believe, and usually used in simple, not progressive, tenses: I liked them. I want some. I will never believe it.
  • staving — one of the thin, narrow, shaped pieces of wood that form the sides of a cask, tub, or similar vessel.
  • strayve — to wander aimlessly
  • suasive — the act of advising, urging, or attempting to persuade; persuasion.
  • suavely — (of persons or their manner, speech, etc.) smoothly agreeable or polite; agreeably or blandly urbane.
  • suavest — (of persons or their manner, speech, etc.) smoothly agreeable or polite; agreeably or blandly urbane.
  • suavity — a suave or smoothly agreeable quality.
  • suboval — not quite oval
  • suevian — a member of an ancient Germanic people of uncertain origin, mentioned in the writings of Caesar and Tacitus.
  • synovia — a lubricating fluid resembling the white of an egg, secreted by certain membranes, as those of the joints.
  • 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.
  • trivias — (in Roman religion) Hecate: so called because she was the goddess of the crossroads.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?