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10-letter words containing v, e, s, l

  • simulative — to create a simulation, likeness, or model of (a situation, system, or the like): to simulate crisis conditions.
  • skin alive — the external covering or integument of an animal body, especially when soft and flexible.
  • slave ship — a ship for transporting slaves from their native homes to places of bondage.
  • slavophile — a person who greatly admires the Slavs and Slavic ways.
  • slavophobe — a person who fears or hates the Slavs, their influence, or things Slavic.
  • sleep over — to take the rest afforded by a suspension of voluntary bodily functions and the natural suspension, complete or partial, of consciousness; cease being awake.
  • sleep-over — to take the rest afforded by a suspension of voluntary bodily functions and the natural suspension, complete or partial, of consciousness; cease being awake.
  • sleeve dog — a very small Pekingese, usually under six pounds in weight and less than six inches (15 cm) tall.
  • sleevehand — a sleeve's cuff or wristband
  • sleeveless — without sleeves.
  • slide over — to cross by or as if by sliding
  • slovenlike — slovenly
  • snivelling — to weep or cry with sniffling.
  • snow devil — a whirling column of snow
  • solemn vow — a perpetual, irrevocable public vow taken by a religious, in which property may not be owned by the individual, and marriage is held invalid under canon law.
  • somervilleMary Fairfax Greig [greg] /grɛg/ (Show IPA), 1780–1872, Scottish mathematician and astronomer.
  • spill over — be full of: emotion
  • splenative — relating to the spleen or spleenful
  • spoliative — blood-diminishing
  • sql server — (database)   (Note capitalised) 1. Sybase Adaptive Server Enterprise. 2. Microsoft SQL Server.
  • starkville — a town in E Mississippi.
  • starveling — a person, animal, or plant that is starving.
  • storyville — a red-light district of New Orleans known as a wellspring of jazz before World War I.
  • stove bolt — a small bolt, similar to a machine screw but with a coarser thread.
  • stove coal — anthracite coal in sizes ranging from 1 5/8 to 2 7/16 (about 4 to 6 cm), intermediate between egg coal and chestnut coal.
  • suaveolent — fragrant or sweet-smelling
  • subclavate — somewhat club-shaped.
  • subvisible — invisible unless viewed through a microscope.
  • sullom voe — a deep coastal inlet in the Shetland Islands, on the N coast of Mainland. It is used for the storage and transshipment of oil
  • sun valley — a village in S central Idaho: winter resort.
  • suppletive — serving as an inflected form of a word with a totally different stem, as went, the suppletive past of go.
  • surveilled — to place under surveillance.
  • survivable — able to be survived: Would an atomic war be survivable?
  • svelteness — the quality of being svelte
  • sverdlovsk — former name (1924–91) of Ekaterinburg.
  • swerveless — tending not to swerve
  • swivel gun — a gun mounted on a pedestal so that it can be turned from side to side or up and down.
  • swiveltree — swingletree.
  • sylvestral — growing, living, or occurring in a wood or beneath a tree
  • television — the transmission of programming, in the form of still or moving images, via radio waves, cable wires, satellite, or wireless network to a receiver or other screen.
  • televisual — Televisual means broadcast on or related to television.
  • temps leve — a small hop on one foot, with the other foot raised off the floor.
  • the-rivals — a comedy of manners (1775) by Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
  • themselves — reflexive
  • thriveless — not thriving, flourishing or prospering
  • titusville — a town in central Florida.
  • townsville — a seaport on the E coast of Queensland, in E Australia.
  • transvalue — to reestimate the value of, especially on a basis differing from accepted standards; reappraise; reevaluate.
  • trivialise — to make trivial; cause to appear unimportant, trifling, etc.
  • unabsolved — to free from guilt or blame or their consequences: The court absolved her of guilt in his death.
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