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10-letter words containing t, a, i, v, e, r

  • innervated — to communicate nervous energy to; stimulate through nerves.
  • innervates — to communicate nervous energy to; stimulate through nerves.
  • interleave — to provide blank leaves in (a book) for notes or written comments.
  • intervales — Plural form of intervale.
  • intervital — existing or occurring between two lives, such as between humanly death and heavenly existence
  • interweave — to weave together, as threads, strands, branches, or roots.
  • inveracity — untruthfulness; mendacity.
  • inveteracy — the quality or state of being inveterate or deeply ingrained: the inveteracy of people's prejudices.
  • inveterate — settled or confirmed in a habit, practice, feeling, or the like: an inveterate gambler.
  • invigorate — to give vigor to; fill with life and energy; energize.
  • irrelative — not relative; without relation (usually followed by to).
  • irrelevant — not relevant; not applicable or pertinent: His lectures often stray to interesting but irrelevant subjects.
  • irrigative — serving for or pertaining to irrigation.
  • irritative — serving or tending to irritate.
  • lacerative — Lacerating, or having the power to lacerate.
  • lagerkvist — Pär [par] /pær/ (Show IPA), 1891–1974, Swedish novelist, poet, and essayist: Nobel Prize 1951.
  • lavatories — Plural form of lavatory.
  • lentiviral — Of or pertaining to a lentivirus.
  • leviration — Levirate marriage.
  • liberative — to set free, as from imprisonment or bondage.
  • liver pâté — pâté made from minced liver meat
  • livestream — to broadcast (an event) on the internet as it happens
  • lucerative — Misspelling of lucrative.
  • memorative — (obsolete) commemorative.
  • movie star — famous film actor
  • narratives — Plural form of narrative.
  • numerative — an act or instance of or the process or result of numbering or counting.
  • operatives — Plural form of operative.
  • ordinative — Tending to ordain; directing; giving orders.
  • outrivaled — Simple past tense and past participle of outrival.
  • overacting — Present participle of overact.
  • overaction — Excessive action (as of a muscle of the body).
  • overactive — exceptionally or excessively active; too active.
  • overeating — Gluttony, the act of eating to excess (either to discomfort or more than required for proper health).
  • overstrain — to exert, tax, or use (resources) to an excessive extent
  • overtaking — passing the vehicle in front
  • pejorative — having a disparaging, derogatory, or belittling effect or force: the pejorative affix -ling in princeling.
  • permeative — to pass into or through every part of: Bright sunshine permeated the room.
  • prattville — a town in central Alabama.
  • privatized — (of the production of goods or services) transferred from the public sector of an economy into private ownership and operation
  • privatizer — a person who promotes or facilitates privatization (of publicly owned businesses or services)
  • pro-active — serving to prepare for, intervene in, or control an expected occurrence or situation, especially a negative or difficult one; anticipatory: proactive measures against crime.
  • purgatives — purging or cleansing, especially by causing evacuation of the bowels.
  • ravishment — rapture or ecstasy.
  • reactivate — to render active again; revive.
  • reactively — tending to react.
  • reactivity — the quality or condition of being reactive.
  • reality tv — reality television: unscripted programs
  • recidivate — to engage in recidivism; relapse.
  • recitative — of the nature of or resembling recitation or declamation.
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