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11-letter words containing v, i, c, n

  • hib vaccine — a vaccine against meningitis, pneumonia, and other illnesses caused by the bacterium Haemophilus influenzae type b: usually administered during infancy.
  • in a vacuum — If something is done in a vacuum, it is not affected by any outside influences or information.
  • in evidence — that which tends to prove or disprove something; ground for belief; proof.
  • in recovery — If someone is in recovery, they are being given a course of treatment to help them recover from something such as a drug habit or mental illness.
  • inactivated — Simple past tense and past participle of inactivate.
  • inactivates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of inactivate.
  • incarvillea — any plant of the genus Incarvillea, native to China, of which some species are grown as garden or greenhouse plants for their large usually carmine-coloured trumpet-shaped flowers, esp I. delavayi: family Bignoniaceae
  • incendivity — the power to ignite
  • incentively — something that incites or tends to incite to action or greater effort, as a reward offered for increased productivity.
  • incentivise — (transitive, British spelling) To provide with an incentive. (from 20th c.).
  • incentivize — to give incentives to: The government should incentivize the private sector to create jobs.
  • inceptively — In an inceptive manner.
  • inclusively — including or encompassing the stated limit or extremes in consideration or account (usually used postpositively): from 6 to 37 inclusive.
  • inclusivism — The practice of incorporating disparate or unreconciled elements in a single, inclusive system or theory.
  • inclusivity — An intention or policy of including people who might otherwise be excluded or marginalized, such as those who are handicapped or learning-disabled, or racial and sexual minorities.
  • inconducive — not conducive; tending to be harmful or injurious: inconducive to the public good.
  • inculcative — to implant by repeated statement or admonition; teach persistently and earnestly (usually followed by upon or in): to inculcate virtue in the young.
  • incurvating — Present participle of incurvate.
  • incurvation — curved, especially inward.
  • inductively — of, relating to, or involving electrical induction or magnetic induction.
  • inductivism — The use of or preference for inductive methods of reasoning, especially in science.
  • inductivity — power to induct; an inductive quality
  • ineffective — not effective; not producing results; ineffectual: ineffective efforts; ineffective remedies.
  • infectivity — infectious.
  • innocent iv — (Sinbaldo de Fieschi) c1180–1254, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1243–54.
  • innocent vi — (Étienne Aubert) died 1362, French jurist and ecclesiastic: pope 1352–62.
  • inoculative — to implant (a disease agent or antigen) in a person, animal, or plant to produce a disease for study or to stimulate disease resistance.
  • inscriptive — of, relating to, or of the nature of an inscription.
  • insectivora — the order comprising the insectivores.
  • insectivore — an insectivorous animal or plant.
  • instinctive — of, relating to, or of the nature of instinct.
  • instructive — serving to instruct or inform; conveying instruction, knowledge, or information; enlightening.
  • interactive — acting one upon or with the other.
  • internecive — internecine, or mutually destructive or ruinous
  • intervallic — an intervening period of time: an interval of 50 years.
  • invalid car — a car specially equipped so that a handicapped person can drive it
  • invectively — In an invective manner.
  • invincibles — Plural form of invincible.
  • inviscating — Present participle of inviscate.
  • inviscation — (archaic) insalivation.
  • invocations — Plural form of invocation.
  • invoiceable — Capable of being invoiced; billable.
  • involucrate — having an involucre.
  • irrelevance — the quality or condition of being irrelevant.
  • irrelevancy — irrelevance.
  • irreverence — the quality of being irreverent; lack of reverence or respect.
  • john calvinJohn (Jean Chauvin or Caulvin) 1509–64, French theologian and reformer in Switzerland: leader in the Protestant Reformation.
  • kantorovich — Leonid Vitalyevich [ley-uh-nid vi-tal-yuh-vich;; Russian lyi-uh-nyeet vyi-tah-lyuh-vyich] /ˈleɪ ə nɪd vɪˈtæl yə vɪtʃ;; Russian lyɪ ʌˈnyit vyɪˈtɑ lyə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1912–86, Soviet mathematician and economist: Nobel Prize in Economics 1975.
  • lactoflavin — riboflavin.
  • line vector — a vector having specified magnitude and lying on a given line.
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