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9-letter words containing v, e, i, n

  • evincible — Capable of being proved or clearly brought to light; demonstrable.
  • evincibly — in an evincible manner
  • evitation — (obsolete) A shunning; avoidance.
  • eviternal — (obsolete) eternal; everlasting.
  • evocating — Present participle of evocate.
  • evocation — The act of calling out or forth, or evoking.
  • evolution — The process by which different kinds of living organisms are thought to have developed and diversified from earlier forms during the history of the earth.
  • expansive — Covering a wide area in terms of space or scope; extensive or wide-ranging.
  • expencive — Archaic form of expensive.
  • expensive — Costing a lot of money.
  • extensive — Covering or affecting a large area.
  • fairhaven — a city in SE Massachusetts.
  • fivepence — A monetary amount of five pence.
  • fivepenny — noting a nail 1.75 inches (4.4 cm) long. Symbol: 5d.
  • frivolent — (nonstandard) frivolous, trifling, silly.
  • gain over — persuade
  • galvanise — to stimulate by or as if by a galvanic current.
  • galvanize — to stimulate by or as if by a galvanic current.
  • galvinize — Misspelling of galvanize.
  • gavelkind — (originally) a tenure of land in which the tenant was liable for a rental in money or produce rather than for labor or military service.
  • gavelling — Present participle of gavel.
  • genevieveSaint, a.d. 422–512, French nun: patron saint of Paris.
  • genitival — (in certain inflected languages) noting a case of nouns, pronouns, or adjectives, used primarily to express possession, measure, or origin: as John's hat, week's vacation, duty's call.
  • genitives — Plural form of genitive.
  • gerundive — (in Latin) a verbal adjective similar to the gerund in form and noting the obligation, necessity, or worthiness of the action to be done, as legendus in Liber legendus est, “The book is worth reading.”. See also gerund (def 1).
  • give onto — to cause or occasion: She gives me a pain in the neck.
  • givenness — The fact of being given or posited in an argument, hypothesis etc.
  • go native — being the place or environment in which a person was born or a thing came into being: one's native land.
  • god-given — given by, or coming directly from, God: the God-given laws.
  • governing — to rule over by right of authority: to govern a nation.
  • grandview — a town in W Missouri.
  • granivore — Any animal that eats seeds as the main part of its diet.
  • granvilleEarl of, Carteret, John.
  • grapevine — a town in N Texas.
  • graveling — small stones and pebbles, or a mixture of these with sand.
  • grenvilleGeorge, 1712–70, British statesman: prime minister 1763–65.
  • grievance — a wrong considered as grounds for complaint, or something believed to cause distress: Inequitable taxation is the chief grievance.
  • grievants — Plural form of grievant.
  • groveling — to humble oneself or act in an abject manner, as in great fear or utter servility.
  • guinevere — Arthurian Romance. wife of King Arthur and mistress of Lancelot.
  • han river — a dynasty in China, 206 b.c.–a.d. 220, with an interregnum, a.d. 9–25: characterized by consolidation of the centralized imperial state and territorial expansion. Compare Earlier Han, Later Han.
  • hang five — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • haversian — designating or of the canals through which blood vessels and connective tissue pass in bone
  • haversine — one half the versed sine of a given angle or arc.
  • heaviness — of great weight; hard to lift or carry: a heavy load.
  • heavy ion — the nucleus of a heavy element.
  • helvetian — of or relating to Helvetia or the Helvetii.
  • henry vii — ("Henry of Luxembourg") 1275?–1313, king of Germany 1309–13 and emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1312–13.
  • hive mind — the property of apparent sentience in a colony of social insects acting as a single organism, each insect performing a specific role for the good of the group.
  • hoovering — to clean with a vacuum cleaner.
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