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7-letter words containing v, l, s

  • plosive — (of a stop consonant or occlusive) characterized by release in a plosion; explosive.
  • releves — a rising up onto full point or half point from the flat of the feet.
  • resolve — to come to a definite or earnest decision about; determine (to do something): I have resolved that I shall live to the full.
  • reviles — to assail with contemptuous or opprobrious language; address or speak of abusively.
  • revisal — the act of revising; revision.
  • rivulus — any of several killifishes of the genus Rivulus, native to small streams of tropical America, often kept in aquariums.
  • s level — a public examination in a subject taken for the General Certificate of Education: usually taken at the same time as A2 levels as an additional qualification
  • salavat — a city in the Bashkir Autonomous Republic, in the SW Russian Federation in Asia, S of Ufa.
  • salival — salivary
  • salvage — the act of saving a ship or its cargo from perils of the seas.
  • salvete — welcome!
  • salving — a medicinal ointment for healing or relieving wounds and sores.
  • savable — to rescue from danger or possible harm, injury, or loss: to save someone from drowning.
  • saveloy — a highly seasoned, dried sausage.
  • savvily — in a savvy manner
  • selvage — the edge of woven fabric finished so as to prevent raveling, often in a narrow tape effect, different from the body of the fabric.
  • servile — slavishly submissive or obsequious; fawning: servile flatterers.
  • servlet — a small program that runs on a web server, often accessing databases in response to client input
  • several — being more than two but fewer than many in number or kind: several ways of doing it.
  • seville — a port in SW Spain, on the Guadalquivir River: site of the Alcazar; cathedral.
  • shelves — plural of shelf.
  • shively — a city in N Kentucky, near Louisville.
  • shrivel — shrink, dry up
  • silvana — a female given name, form of Silvia or Sylvia.
  • silvern — made of or like silver.
  • silvery — resembling silver; of a lustrous grayish-white color: the silvery moon.
  • silvics — the scientific study of trees and their environment.
  • slavery — the condition of a slave; bondage.
  • slaving — a person who is the property of and wholly subject to another; a bond servant.
  • slavish — of or befitting a slave: slavish subjection.
  • slavism — something that is native to, characteristic of, or associated with the Slavs or Slavic.
  • slavist — a specialist in the study of Slavic languages, cultures, etc.
  • slavkov — Czech name of Austerlitz.
  • sleeved — fitted with sleeves
  • sleever — a measure of beer, equal to about three-quarters of a pint
  • slesvig — Danish name of Schleswig.
  • slovene — one of a Slavic people dwelling in Slovenia.
  • snively — characterized by or given to sniveling.
  • solvate — a compound formed by the interaction of a solvent and a solute.
  • solvent — able to pay all just debts.
  • stokvel — an informal savings pool or syndicate, usually among Black people, in which funds are contributed in rotation, allowing participants lump sums for family needs (esp funerals)
  • suavely — (of persons or their manner, speech, etc.) smoothly agreeable or polite; agreeably or blandly urbane.
  • suboval — not quite oval
  • surveil — to place under surveillance.
  • svelter — slender, especially gracefully slender in figure; lithe.
  • sylvite — a common mineral, potassium chloride, KCl, colorless to milky-white or red, occurring in crystals, usually cubes, and masses with cubic cleavage, bitter in taste: the most important source of potassium.
  • sysvile — Missed'em-five
  • vandals — (initial capital letter) a member of a Germanic people who in the 5th century a.d. ravaged Gaul and Spain, settled in Africa, and in a.d. 455 sacked Rome.
  • vascula — a kind of case or box used by botanists for carrying specimens as they are collected.
  • vassals — (in the feudal system) a person granted the use of land, in return for rendering homage, fealty, and usually military service or its equivalent to a lord or other superior; feudal tenant.
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