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7-letter words containing s, u, v

  • rustavi — a city in the SE Georgian Republic, SE of Tbilisi.
  • s-curve — a curve shaped like an S .
  • save up — put money aside
  • saviour — a person who saves, rescues, or delivers: the savior of the country.
  • savoury — pleasant or agreeable in taste or smell: a savory aroma.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • stuiver — stiver (def 1).
  • 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
  • subvene — to arrive or occur as a support or relief.
  • subvert — to overthrow (something established or existing).
  • suevian — a member of an ancient Germanic people of uncertain origin, mentioned in the writings of Caesar and Tacitus.
  • sunview — A windowing system from Sun Microsystems, superseded by NeWS.
  • 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.
  • tussive — of or relating to a cough.
  • unsaved — to rescue from danger or possible harm, injury, or loss: to save someone from drowning.
  • unsavvy — Informal. inexperienced or untrained: a term used only by unsavvy freshmen.
  • unvisor — to remove a visor from
  • ustinov — Sir Peter (Alexander). 1921–2004, British stage and film actor, director, dramatist, and raconteur
  • uveitis — inflammation of the uvea.
  • vacuist — a person who believes in the existence of vacuums between molecules and atoms of matter or between bodies of the universe
  • vacuous — without contents; empty: the vacuous air.
  • vagitus — a new-born baby's first cry
  • vaguest — not clearly or explicitly stated or expressed: vague promises.
  • vareuse — a type of loose coat or jacket
  • various — of different kinds, as two or more things; differing one from another: Various experiments have not proved his theory.
  • vascula — a kind of case or box used by botanists for carrying specimens as they are collected.
  • vaudois — Waldenses.
  • veinous — having veins; veiny
  • versute — cunning or crafty
  • vesture — Law. everything growing on and covering the land, with the exception of trees. any such covering, as grass or wheat.
  • vicious — addicted to or characterized by vice; grossly immoral; depraved; profligate: a vicious life.
  • vidimus — a legal or official inspection
  • viduous — empty
  • vigours — active strength or force.
  • villous — covered with or of the nature of villi.
  • vilnius — a republic in N Europe, on the Baltic: an independent state 1918–40; annexed by the Soviet Union 1940; regained independence 1991. 25,174 sq. mi. (65,200 sq. km). Capital: Vilnius.
  • viribus — with all one's might.
  • virtues — moral excellence; goodness; righteousness.
  • viruses — an ultramicroscopic (20 to 300 nm in diameter), metabolically inert, infectious agent that replicates only within the cells of living hosts, mainly bacteria, plants, and animals: composed of an RNA or DNA core, a protein coat, and, in more complex types, a surrounding envelope.
  • viscous — of a glutinous nature or consistency; sticky; thick; adhesive.
  • vistula — a river in Poland, flowing N from the Carpathian Mountains past Warsaw into the Baltic near Danzig. About 650 miles (1050 km) long.
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