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11-letter words containing t, r, e, v, i

  • privateness — the quality of being private
  • privet hawk — a hawk moth, Sphinx ligustri, with a mauve-and-brown striped body: frequents privets
  • proactively — serving to prepare for, intervene in, or control an expected occurrence or situation, especially a negative or difficult one; anticipatory: proactive measures against crime.
  • procreative — to beget or generate (offspring).
  • progenitive — capable of having offspring; reproductive.
  • prohibitive — serving or tending to prohibit or forbid something.
  • propagative — to cause (an organism) to multiply by any process of natural reproduction from the parent stock.
  • prospective — of or in the future: prospective earnings.
  • protractive — to draw out or lengthen, especially in time; extend the duration of; prolong.
  • providently — having or showing foresight; providing carefully for the future.
  • provocative — tending or serving to provoke; inciting, stimulating, irritating, or vexing.
  • pulveration — the reduction of something to powder
  • radioactive — of, pertaining to, exhibiting, or caused by radioactivity.
  • reactivated — to render active again; revive.
  • readvertise — to advertise (something) again
  • rebarbative — causing annoyance, irritation, or aversion; repellent.
  • receptively — having the quality of receiving, taking in, or admitting.
  • receptivity — having the quality of receiving, taking in, or admitting.
  • recultivate — to plant, tend, harvest, or improve (plants) again
  • reductively — of or relating to reduction; serving to reduce or abridge: an urgent need for reductive measures.
  • reductivism — reductionism.
  • reformative — the improvement or amendment of what is wrong, corrupt, unsatisfactory, etc.: social reform; spelling reform.
  • reinnervate — to restore a lost nerve supply to (a muscle, nerve, etc) by surgery or regeneration
  • reinterview — to interview or question again
  • reinvention — to invent again or anew, especially without knowing that the invention already exists.
  • reiterative — to say or do again or repeatedly; repeat, often excessively.
  • relative to — a person who is connected with another or others by blood or marriage.
  • reluctivity — the tendency of a magnetic circuit to conduct magnetic flux, equal to the reciprocal of the permeability of the circuit.
  • remotivated — to provide with a motive, or a cause or reason to act; incite; impel.
  • rent review — a provision in the lease of a business premise whereby the amount of the rent being paid is reconsidered at stated intervals, for example every three or five years
  • replicative — characterized by or capable of replication, especially of an experiment.
  • reprivatize — to restore to private control; remove from governmental jurisdiction.
  • reprobative — reprobating; expressing reprobation.
  • repudiative — to reject as having no authority or binding force: to repudiate a claim.
  • reservation — the act of keeping back, withholding, or setting apart.
  • resistively — in a resistive manner, with resistance
  • resistivity — the power or property of resistance.
  • restitutive — reparation made by giving an equivalent or compensation for loss, damage, or injury caused; indemnification.
  • restiveness — impatient of control, restraint, or delay, as persons; restless; uneasy.
  • restorative — serving to restore; pertaining to restoration.
  • restrictive — tending or serving to restrict.
  • resultative — (in grammar) a phrase which describes the state of a noun by completing the verb phrase
  • retaliative — to return like for like, especially evil for evil: to retaliate for an injury.
  • retentivity — the power to retain; retentiveness.
  • retributive — characterized by or involving retribution: retributive justice.
  • retrievable — to recover or regain: to retrieve the stray ball.
  • retroactive — operative with respect to past occurrences, as a statute; retrospective: a retroactive law.
  • revaccinate — to vaccinate (a person or animal) again
  • revalidated — to make valid; substantiate; confirm: Time validated our suspicions.
  • revaluating — to make a new or revised valuation of; revalue.
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