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10-letter words containing v, b

  • inevitable — unable to be avoided, evaded, or escaped; certain; necessary: an inevitable conclusion.
  • inevitably — unable to be avoided, evaded, or escaped; certain; necessary: an inevitable conclusion.
  • inhibitive — to restrain, hinder, arrest, or check (an action, impulse, etc.).
  • insolvable — incapable of being solved or explained; insoluble.
  • invaluable — beyond calculable or appraisable value; of inestimable worth; priceless: an invaluable art collection; her invaluable assistance.
  • invaluably — beyond calculable or appraisable value; of inestimable worth; priceless: an invaluable art collection; her invaluable assistance.
  • invariable — not variable; not changing or capable of being changed; static or constant.
  • invariably — not variable; not changing or capable of being changed; static or constant.
  • invendible — unsaleable
  • inventable — to originate or create as a product of one's own ingenuity, experimentation, or contrivance: to invent the telegraph.
  • inventible — to originate or create as a product of one's own ingenuity, experimentation, or contrivance: to invent the telegraph.
  • invertible — to turn upside down.
  • investable — that can be invested.
  • investible — that can be invested.
  • invincible — incapable of being conquered, defeated, or subdued.
  • invincibly — incapable of being conquered, defeated, or subdued.
  • inviolable — prohibiting violation; secure from destruction, violence, infringement, or desecration: an inviolable sanctuary; an inviolable promise.
  • inviolably — prohibiting violation; secure from destruction, violence, infringement, or desecration: an inviolable sanctuary; an inviolable promise.
  • jervis bay — an inlet of the Pacific in SE Australia, in Jervis Bay Territory on the coast of S New South Wales: regarded for some purposes as part of the Australian Capital Territory: site of the Royal Australian Naval College
  • kabalevsky — Dmitri [duh-mee-tree;; Russian dmyee-tryee] /dəˈmi tri;; Russian ˈdmyi tryi/ (Show IPA), 1904–1987, Russian composer.
  • khabarovsk — Formerly Far Eastern Region. a territory of the Russian Federation in NE Asia. 965,400 sq. mi. (2,500,400 sq. km).
  • labiovelar — pronounced with simultaneous bilabial and velar articulations, as w.
  • laverbread — laver seaweed fried as a breakfast food; popular in Wales
  • lévy-bruhl — Lucien (lysjɛ̃). 1857–1939, French anthropologist and philosopher, noted for his study of the psychology of primitive peoples
  • liberative — to set free, as from imprisonment or bondage.
  • libreville — Official name Gabonese Republic. a republic in W equatorial Africa: formerly a part of French Equatorial Africa; member of the French Community. 102,290 sq. mi. (264,931 sq. km). Capital: Libreville.
  • livability — suitable for living in; habitable; comfortable: It took a lot of work to make the old house livable.
  • live birth — the birth of a living child
  • livebearer — any viviparous fish of the family Poeciliidae, often kept in home aquariums.
  • lovability — of such a nature as to attract love; deserving love; amiable; endearing.
  • love beads — a necklace of small, often handmade beads, worn as a symbol of peace and goodwill, especially in the 1960s.
  • misbehaved — Simple past tense and past participle of misbehave.
  • misbehaves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of misbehave.
  • misbelieve — to believe wrongly; hold an erroneous belief.
  • misobserve — to observe incorrectly or inaccurately
  • movability — capable of being moved; not fixed in one place, position, or posture.
  • move about — fidget, be restless
  • nabokovian — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or resembling the literary style of Vladimir Nabokov: a sly, Nabokovian sense of the absurd.
  • naval base — military stronghold
  • non-verbal — of or relating to words: verbal ability.
  • non-viable — not capable of living, growing, and developing, as an embryo, seed, or plant.
  • nonobvious — Not obvious.
  • novobiocin — an aminocoumarin antibiotic, C31H36N2O11, derived from Streptomyces niveus, which works by inhibiting DNA synthesis in bacteria
  • objectives — Plural form of objective.
  • objvprolog — Logic programming and object-orientation, an adaptation of the ObjVlisp model to Prolog.
  • obligative — implying or involving obligation: an obligative commitment.
  • obrenovichAlexander, Alexander I (def 3).
  • observable — Able to be noticed or perceived; discernible.
  • observably — capable of being or liable to be observed; noticeable; visible; discernible: an observable change in attitude.
  • observance — an act or instance of following, obeying, or conforming to: the observance of traffic laws.
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