0%

12-letter words containing v, e, r

  • vacuum servo — a servomechanism that is operated by the lowering of pressure in the intake duct of an internal-combustion engine
  • val-de-marne — a department in N France. 94 sq. mi. (243 sq. km). Capital: Créteil.
  • valeric acid — any of several isomeric organic acids having the formula C 5 H 10 O 2 , the common one being a liquid of pungent odor obtained from valerian roots: used chiefly as an intermediate in perfumery.
  • valetudinary — valetudinarian.
  • valley fever — coccidioidomycosis.
  • valley forge — a village in SE Pennsylvania: winter quarters of Washington's army 1777–78.
  • valve lifter — (in an internal-combustion engine) a tappet that opens a valve when actuated by a camshaft.
  • valve spring — a helical spring used to hold closed a valve in the cylinder head of an internal-combustion engine
  • van der post — Sir Laurens (Jan). 1906–96, South African writer and traveller. His works include the travel books Venture to the Interior (1952), The Lost World of the Kalahari (1958), and Testament to the Bushmen (1984) and the novels The Hunter and the Whale (1967) and The Admiral's Baby (1996)
  • van der rohe — Ludwig Mies [luhd-wig meez,, mees] /ˈlʌd wɪg miz,, mis/ (Show IPA), Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig.
  • van devanterWillis, 1859–1941, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1910–37.
  • van riebeeck — Jan, full name Johan Anthoniszoon van Riebeeck. 1619–77, Dutch colonial administrator. Founder of the colony of the Cape of Good Hope (1652)
  • vanga shrike — any of several birds of the family Vangidae, endemic to Madagascar, some of which resemble shrikes, with great diversity in size, color, and bill shape.
  • vanity press — a printing house that specializes in publishing books for which the authors pay all or most of the costs.
  • vaporescence — production or formation of vapor.
  • vaporishness — the quality or state of being vaporish
  • varia lectio — a variant reading.
  • variableness — apt or liable to vary or change; changeable: variable weather; variable moods.
  • varicoloured — having many colours; variegated; motley
  • varicosities — the state or condition of being varicose.
  • variety meat — edible meat other than the usual flesh, especially organs, as tongue and liver.
  • variety show — vaudeville performance
  • variety turn — an act in a variety show
  • variocoupler — a transformer having coils with a self-impedance that is essentially constant but a mutual impedance that can be varied by moving one coil with respect to the other.
  • varnish tree — any of various trees yielding sap or other substances used for varnish, as Rhus verniciflua, of Japan.
  • varying hare — snowshoe hare.
  • vas deferens — the duct that transports the sperm from the epididymis to the penis.
  • vas efferens — any of a number of short ducts that carry sperm from the testis to the epididymis.
  • vascularised — (of a tissue or embryo) to develop or extend blood vessels or other fluid-bearing vessels or ducts; become vascular.
  • vascularized — rendered vascular by the formation of new blood vessels.
  • vasoligature — vasoligation.
  • vector boson — one of the three particles that are believed to transmit the weak force: the positively charged W particle, the negatively charged W particle, and the neutral Z 0 particle.
  • vector field — a region, domain, set, etc., with a vector assigned at each point; vector function.
  • vector space — an additive group in which addition is commutative and with which is associated a field of scalars, as the field of real numbers, such that the product of a scalar and an element of the group or a vector is defined, the product of two scalars times a vector is associative, one times a vector is the vector, and two distributive laws hold.
  • velarization — to pronounce with velar articulation.
  • velcro strip — a strip or roll of Velcro, able to be cut to the required length
  • vellum paper — a creamy coloured heavy paper resembling vellum
  • velociraptor — a small carnivorous dinosaur of the genus Velociraptor , from the late Cretaceous period, capable of leaping, and growing to a length of about 6 feet (2 meters), having feathers, a flat snout, short forelimbs with large handlike talons, and a large sickle-shaped claw on each foot.
  • veneer patch — a patch made in one of the veneers of a sheet of plywood before layup.
  • venepuncture — the puncture of a vein for surgical or therapeutic purposes or for collecting blood specimens for analysis.
  • venerability — commanding respect because of great age or impressive dignity; worthy of veneration or reverence, as because of high office or noble character: a venerable member of Congress.
  • venetian red — a red pigment, originally prepared from a natural oxide of iron, now usually made by calcining a mixture of lime and ferrous sulfate.
  • venipuncture — the puncture of a vein for surgical or therapeutic purposes or for collecting blood specimens for analysis.
  • venn diagram — a diagram that uses circles to represent sets and their relationships.
  • ventnor city — a town in SE New Jersey.
  • ventral root — a nerve fiber bundle that emerges from either side of the spinal cord and joins with a complementary bundle to form each spinal nerve in the series of spinal nerves: the root at the rear of the spinal cord (dorsal root or sensory root) conveys sensations to the central nervous system, and the root at the front (ventral root or motor root) conveys impulses to the muscles.
  • ventripotent — having a large belly
  • ventrodorsal — pertaining to the ventral and dorsal aspects of the body; extending from the ventral to the dorsal side.
  • ventromedial — relating to both the ventral and medial surfaces, or to the front and to the middle
  • venturi tube — a device for measuring the flow of a fluid, consisting of a tube with a short, narrow center section and widened, tapered ends, so that a fluid flowing through the center section at a higher velocity than through an end section creates a pressure differential that is a measure of the flow of the fluid.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?