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10-letter words containing v, u, t

  • outrivaled — Simple past tense and past participle of outrival.
  • outtravels — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outtravel.
  • outvillain — to outdo in villainy
  • overbought — marked by prices considered unjustifiably high because of extensive buying: The stock market is overbought now. Compare oversold.
  • overbrutal — excessively brutal
  • overbudget — costing or being more than the amount alloted or budgeted: The building is half-finished and it's already overbudget.
  • overmature — complete in natural growth or development, as plant and animal forms: a mature rose bush.
  • overstruck — to stamp a new device, value, or inscription on (a coin).
  • overstrung — overly tense or sensitive; strained; on edge: Their nerves were badly overstrung.
  • oversubtle — too subtle (so as to be unnoticed)
  • overtaught — taught to excess
  • overthrust — a thrust fault with a low dip and a large slip.
  • overturned — to destroy the power of; overthrow; defeat; vanquish.
  • overturner — a person who overturns
  • pluviosity — of or relating to rain; rainy.
  • pole vault — sports event: high jump using a pole
  • pole-vault — to execute a pole vault.
  • productive — having the power of producing; generative; creative: a productive effort.
  • protrusive — projecting or protuberant; thrusting forward, upward, or outward.
  • punitively — serving for, concerned with, or inflicting punishment: punitive laws; punitive action.
  • purgatives — purging or cleansing, especially by causing evacuation of the bowels.
  • pursuivant — a heraldic officer of the lowest class, ranking below a herald.
  • putatively — commonly regarded as such; reputed; supposed: the putative boss of the mob.
  • quantitive — that is or may be estimated by quantity.
  • quiddative — Constituting, or containing, the essence of a thing.
  • quivertips — Plural form of quivertip.
  • reevaluate — to determine or set the value or amount of; appraise: to evaluate property.
  • refutative — tending to refute; pertaining to refutation: refutative evidence.
  • regulative — to control or direct by a rule, principle, method, etc.: to regulate household expenses.
  • rejuvenate — to make young again; restore to youthful vigor, appearance, etc.: That vacation has certainly rejuvenated him.
  • reputative — reputed, putative, regarded as such
  • resolutive — having the ability to dissolve or terminate.
  • resumptive — that summarizes: a resumptive statement.
  • retrovirus — any of a family of single-stranded RNA viruses having a helical envelope and containing an enzyme that allows for a reversal of genetic transcription, from RNA to DNA rather than the usual DNA to RNA, the newly transcribed viral DNA being incorporated into the host cell's DNA strand for the production of new RNA retroviruses: the family includes the AIDS virus and certain oncogene-carrying viruses implicated in various cancers.
  • revaluated — to make a new or revised valuation of; revalue.
  • revolution — an overthrow or repudiation and the thorough replacement of an established government or political system by the people governed.
  • ruddevator — a control surface functioning both as a rudder and as an elevator.
  • ruminative — to chew the cud, as a ruminant.
  • sieve tube — a vertical series of sieve cells in the phloem, specialized for the conduction of food materials.
  • simulative — to create a simulation, likeness, or model of (a situation, system, or the like): to simulate crisis conditions.
  • stuyvesantPeter, 1592–1672, Dutch colonial administrator in the Americas: last governor of New Netherlands 1646–64.
  • suaveolent — fragrant or sweet-smelling
  • subclavate — somewhat club-shaped.
  • subjective — existing in the mind; belonging to the thinking subject rather than to the object of thought (opposed to objective).
  • subvariety — a minor or subordinate variety
  • subvention — a grant of money, as by a government or some other authority, in aid or support of some institution or undertaking, especially in connection with science or the arts.
  • suggestive — that suggests; referring to other thoughts, persons, etc.: His recommendation was suggestive of his boss's thinking.
  • suppletive — serving as an inflected form of a word with a totally different stem, as went, the suppletive past of go.
  • supportive — giving support.
  • supravital — pertaining to or involving a staining method for a preparation of living cells.
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