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11-letter words containing v, i, c

  • eviscerated — Disembowel (a person or animal).
  • eviscerates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of eviscerate.
  • eviscerator — Someone who eviscerates, whether physically or metaphorically.
  • evocatively — In an evocative manner.
  • excavations — Plural form of excavation.
  • excessively — To a greater degree or in greater amounts than is necessary, normal, or desirable; inordinately.
  • exclamative — a word or sentence that denotes an exclamation
  • exclusively — To the exclusion of others ; only; solely.
  • exclusivism — The action or policy of excluding a person or group from a place, group, or privilege.
  • exclusivist — An advocate of exclusivism.
  • exclusivity — The state of being exclusive.
  • excursively — In an excursive manner.
  • expectative — Of or pertaining to an expectation.
  • explicative — Explanatory; serving to explain logically or in detail.
  • exsiccative — Tending to make dry; having the power of drying.
  • extractives — Plural form of extractive.
  • face-saving — something that saves one's prestige or dignity: Allow him the face-saver of resigning instead of being fired.
  • factor viii — antihemophilic factor.
  • facultative — conferring a faculty, privilege, permission, or the power of doing or not doing something: a facultative enactment.
  • fascinative — to attract and hold attentively by a unique power, personal charm, unusual nature, or some other special quality; enthrall: a vivacity that fascinated the audience.
  • fever pitch — a high degree of excitement, as of a gathering of people: The announcement of victory brought the crowd to fever pitch.
  • fictiveness — The quality of being fictive.
  • fleece-vine — silver-lace vine.
  • flexecutive — an executive to whom the employer allows flexibility about times and locations of working
  • foodservice — The business of providing food and related services.
  • frederick v — called the Winter King. 1596–1632, elector of the Palatinate (1610–23) and king of Bohemia (1619–20). He led the revolt of Bohemian Protestants at the beginning of the Thirty Years' War
  • ftp archive — archive site
  • give credit — allow delayed payment
  • give notice — warn, inform
  • gravimetric — of or relating to measurement by weight.
  • hairy vetch — a plant, Vicia villosa, of the legume family, native to Eurasia, having hairy stems and violet and white flowers, widely grown as forage and as a cover crop.
  • heavy chain — a type of polypeptide chain present in an immunoglobulin molecule
  • hercegovina — Herzegovina.
  • hib vaccine — a vaccine against meningitis, pneumonia, and other illnesses caused by the bacterium Haemophilus influenzae type b: usually administered during infancy.
  • hircocervus — (in classical and medieval fable) a mythical creature that is half goat and half stag
  • hyperactive — unusually or abnormally active: a company's hyperactive growth; the child's hyperactive imagination.
  • hypovolemic — Of, pertaining to, or characterized by low volume of blood in the circulatory system; as hypovolemic shock.
  • implicative — tending to implicate or imply; characterized by or involving implication.
  • 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.
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