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13-letter words containing s, e, r, v

  • caustic curve — a curve formed by the intersection of a caustic surface with a plane
  • cavernicolous — inhabiting caves or cavelike places
  • charles leverCharles James ("Cornelius O'Dowd") 1806–72, Irish novelist and essayist.
  • cheval screen — a fire screen, usually with a cloth panel, having supports at the ends and mounted on legs.
  • child version — (system management)   In change management, a configuration item derived by altering another item (its parent version).
  • christmas eve — Christmas Eve is the 24th of December, the day before Christmas Day.
  • civil servant — A civil servant is a person who works in the Civil Service in Britain and some other countries, or for the local, state, or federal government in the United States.
  • civil service — The Civil Service of a country consists of its government departments and all the people who work in them. In many countries, the departments concerned with military and legal affairs are not part of the Civil Service.
  • client-server — (programming)   A common form of distributed system in which software is split between server tasks and client tasks. A client sends requests to a server, according to some protocol, asking for information or action, and the server responds. This is analogous to a customer (client) who sends an order (request) on an order form to a supplier (server) who despatches the goods and an invoice (response). The order form and invoice are part of the "protocol" used to communicate in this case. There may be either one centralised server or several distributed ones. This model allows clients and servers to be placed independently on nodes in a network, possibly on different hardware and operating systems appropriate to their function, e.g. fast server/cheap client. Examples are the name-server/name-resolver relationship in DNS, the file-server/file-client relationship in NFS and the screen server/client application split in the X Window System.
  • clishmaclaver — idle talk; gossip
  • commiserative — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • comprehensive — Something that is comprehensive includes everything that is needed or relevant.
  • conservancies — Plural form of conservancy.
  • conservatives — Plural form of conservative.
  • conservatized — Simple past tense and past participle of conservatize.
  • conservatoire — A conservatoire is an institution where musicians are trained.
  • conservatoria — Plural form of conservatorium.
  • considerative — considerate
  • contragestive — able to prevent gestation
  • contrastively — tending to contrast; contrasting. contrastive colors.
  • contraversial — Misspelling of controversial.
  • contraversion — A turning to the opposite side; antistrophe.
  • controversary — (obsolete) controversial.
  • controversial — If you describe something or someone as controversial, you mean that they are the subject of intense public argument, disagreement, or disapproval.
  • controversies — Plural form of controversy.
  • controversion — (chiefly, archaic) controversy.
  • controvertist — a controversialist
  • conversations — Plural form of conversation.
  • conversazione — a social gathering for discussion of the arts, literature, etc
  • cookery stove — cookstove.
  • copperas cove — a town in central Texas.
  • coronaviruses — Plural form of coronavirus.
  • corresponsive — corresponding
  • corrosiveness — having the quality of corroding or eating away; erosive.
  • cover version — A cover version of a song is a version of it recorded by a singer or band who did not originally perform the song.
  • coversed sine — obsolete function in trigonometry
  • crossing over — the interchange of sections between pairing homologous chromosomes during the diplotene stage of meiosis. It results in the rearrangement of genes and produces variation in the inherited characteristics of the offspring
  • culver's root — a tall North American scrophulariaceous plant, Veronicastrum virginicum, having spikes of small white or purple flowers
  • cushion cover — a fabric cover, often with a decorative design, designed to protect a cushion
  • cyberactivism — Activism facilitated by the Internet.
  • damage survey — an inspection by an insurance company of something that has been damaged and for which an insurance claim has been made, in order to determine the extent and cause of damage
  • dasht-e-kavir — large salt-desert plateau in NC Iran: c. 18,000 sq mi (46,620 sq km)
  • defervescence — the abatement of a fever
  • defervescency — Alternative form of defervescence.
  • demonstrative — Someone who is demonstrative shows affection freely and openly.
  • denmark veseyDenmark, 1767–1822, black freedman, born probably on St. Thomas, Danish West Indies: hanged as alleged leader of a slave insurrection, in Charleston, S.C.
  • derivationist — a person who believes that it is possible to derive knowledge of what is good for humans from a metaphysical study of humans themselves
  • descriptively — having the quality of describing; characterized by description: a descriptive passage in an essay.
  • descriptivism — the theory that moral utterances have a truth value
  • descriptivist — a writer, teacher, or supporter of descriptive grammar or descriptive linguistics.
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