9-letter words containing v, e, n, g
- ravelling — to disentangle or unravel the threads or fibers of (a woven or knitted fabric, rope, etc.).
- ravenings — rapacious behaviour and activities
- receiving — to take into one's possession (something offered or delivered): to receive many gifts.
- relieving — to ease or alleviate (pain, distress, anxiety, need, etc.).
- reproving — If you give someone a reproving look or speak in a reproving voice, you show or say that you think they have behaved in a wrong or foolish way.
- revamping — to renovate, redo, or revise: We've decided to revamp the entire show.
- revealing — to make known; disclose; divulge: to reveal a secret.
- revelling — to take great pleasure or delight (usually followed by in): to revel in luxury.
- revengive — vengeful, seeking revenge
- revoicing — to voice again or in return; echo.
- revolting — disgusting; repulsive: a revolting sight.
- revolving — that revolves: a revolving table top.
- rivetting — a metal pin for passing through holes in two or more plates or pieces to hold them together, usually made with a head at one end, the other end being hammered into a head after insertion.
- scavenger — an animal or other organism that feeds on dead organic matter.
- servicing — an act of helpful activity; help; aid: to do someone a service.
- shaveling — Older Use: Disparaging. a clergyman with a shaven or tonsured head.
- shivering — to shake or tremble with cold, fear, excitement, etc.
- shoveling — an implement consisting of a broad blade or scoop attached to a long handle, used for taking up, removing, or throwing loose matter, as earth, snow, or coal.
- sign over — a token; indication.
- silvering — Chemistry. a white, ductile metallic element, used for making mirrors, coins, ornaments, table utensils, photographic chemicals, conductors, etc. Symbol: Ag; atomic weight: 107.870; atomic number: 47; specific gravity: 10.5 at 20°C.
- slaveling — a person in a condition of servility or slavery.
- slavering — to let saliva run from the mouth; slobber; drool.
- slivering — a small, slender, often sharp piece, as of wood or glass, split, broken, or cut off, usually lengthwise or with the grain; splinter.
- sniveling — to weep or cry with sniffling.
- sovereign — a monarch; a king, queen, or other supreme ruler.
- stavanger — a seaport in SW Norway.
- stevenage — a town in N Hertfordshire, in SE England.
- surveying — the science or scientific method of making surveys of land.
- swingover — a shift or transfer in attitude, opinion, or the like.
- traveling — activity: journeying
- unavenged — to take vengeance or exact satisfaction for: to avenge a grave insult.
- unaverage — not average or ordinary
- unenvying — not envying
- ungravely — in a light-hearted manner
- unnerving — to deprive of courage, strength, determination, or confidence; upset: Fear unnerved him.
- unravaged — not ravaged or despoiled
- unveiling — a ceremony in which a statue or monument is presented or displayed for the first time by removing its covering.
- unweaving — to undo, take apart, or separate (something woven); unravel.
- vagueness — (of persons) not clear or definite in thought, understanding, or expression: vague about his motives; a vague person.
- vectoring — the act of vectoring or guiding aircraft using vectors
- veeringly — in a veering manner
- veneering — a thin layer of wood or other material for facing or inlaying wood.
- vengeable — deserving revenge
- vengeably — in a vengeable manner
- vengeance — infliction of injury, harm, humiliation, or the like, on a person by another who has been harmed by that person; violent revenge: But have you the right to vengeance?
- vengement — an act of avenging
- venturing — an undertaking involving uncertainty as to the outcome, especially a risky or dangerous one: a mountain-climbing venture.
- venusberg — a mountain in central Germany in the caverns of which, according to medieval legend, Venus held court.
- vergilian — pertaining to or characteristic of the poet Vergil.
- verifying — to prove the truth of, as by evidence or testimony; confirm; substantiate: Events verified his prediction.