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11-letter words containing b, e, v, i

  • have it bad — suffer disadvantage
  • herbivorous — feeding on plants.
  • hereinabove — before in this document, statement, etc.
  • hib vaccine — a vaccine against meningitis, pneumonia, and other illnesses caused by the bacterium Haemophilus influenzae type b: usually administered during infancy.
  • ill-behaved — 1. [numerical analysis] Said of an algorithm or computational method that tends to blow up because of accumulated roundoff error or poor convergence properties. 2. Software that bypasses the defined operating system interfaces to do things (like screen, keyboard, and disk I/O) itself, often in a way that depends on the hardware of the machine it is running on or which is nonportable or incompatible with other pieces of software. In the IBM PC/mess-dos world, there is a folk theorem (nearly true) to the effect that (owing to gross inadequacies and performance penalties in the OS interface) all interesting applications are ill-behaved. See also bare metal. Opposite: well-behaved, compare PC-ism.
  • immoveables — incapable of being moved; fixed; stationary.
  • imperviable — Impervious.
  • inadvisable — not advisable; inexpedient; unwise.
  • inavertible — Not avertible.
  • individable — indivisible
  • indivisible — not divisible; not separable into parts; incapable of being divided: one nation indivisible.
  • inevitables — Plural form of inevitable.
  • innavigable — unable to be navigated
  • inobservant — lack of attention; inattention; heedlessness: drowsy inobservance.
  • inobtrusive — unobtrusive.
  • inseverable — unable to be severed or separated: an inseverable alliance.
  • interverbal — of or relating to words: verbal ability.
  • invaginable — capable of being invaginated; susceptible of invagination.
  • invertebrae — Invertebrate organisms.
  • invertebral — invertebrate
  • invincibles — Plural form of invincible.
  • invoiceable — Capable of being invoiced; billable.
  • irremovable — not removable.
  • irremovably — So as not to be removable.
  • irrevocable — not to be revoked or recalled; unable to be repealed or annulled; unalterable: an irrevocable decree.
  • irrevocably — not to be revoked or recalled; unable to be repealed or annulled; unalterable: an irrevocable decree.
  • irrevokable — Alternative spelling of irrevocable.
  • izetbegovicAlija [ah-lee-juh] /ɑˈli dʒə/ (Show IPA), 1925–2003, Bosnian politician: president of Bosnia and Herzegovina 1990–96.
  • live-bearer — any viviparous fish of the family Poeciliidae, often kept in home aquariums.
  • liveability — Alternative spelling of livability.
  • livebearers — Plural form of livebearer.
  • lobachevski — Nikoˈlai Iˈvanovich (nikɔˈlaɪ iˈvɑnɔvɪtʃ ) ; nēk^ōlīˈ ēväˈn^ōvich) 1793-1856; Russ. mathematician
  • lubavitcher — a member of a missionary Hasidic movement founded in the 1700s by Rabbi Shneour Zalman of Lyady.
  • makebelieve — Alternative form of make-believe.
  • misbehaving — to behave badly or improperly: The children misbehaved during our visit.
  • misbehavior — improper, inappropriate, or bad behavior.
  • misbelieved — Simple past tense and past participle of misbelieve.
  • misbeliever — Someone who holds an unauthorised belief; a heretic, an unbeliever.
  • moveability — Alternative form of movability.
  • native bush — indigenous forest
  • native-born — born in the place or country indicated: a native-born Australian.
  • navigatable — Navigable.
  • nerve fiber — a process, axon, or dendrite of a nerve cell.
  • nerve fibre — a threadlike extension of a nerve cell; axon
  • noblesville — a town in central Indiana.
  • non-abusive — using, containing, or characterized by harshly or coarsely insulting language: an abusive author; abusive remarks.
  • nonabrasive — not causing abrasion.
  • nonbeliever — a person who lacks belief or faith, as in God, a religion, an idea, or an undertaking.
  • nonverbatim — Not verbatim, i.e. not corresponding to the original, word for word.
  • objective c — (language)   An object-oriented superset of ANSI C by Brad Cox, Productivity Products. Its additions to C are few and are mostly based on Smalltalk. Objective C is implemented as a preprocessor for C. Its syntax is a superset of standard C syntax, and its compiler accepts both C and Objective C source code (filename extension ".m"). It has no operator overloading, multiple inheritance, or class variables. It does have dynamic binding. It is used as the system programming language on the NeXT. As implemented for NEXTSTEP, the Objective C language is fully compatible with ANSI C. Objective C can also be used as an extension to C++, which lacks some of the possibilities for object-oriented design that dynamic typing and dynamic binding bring to Objective C. C++ also has features not found in Objective C. Versions exist for MS-DOS, Macintosh, VAX/VMS and Unix workstations. Language versions by Stepstone, NeXT and GNU are slightly different. There is a library of (GNU) Objective C objects by R. Andrew McCallum <[email protected]> with similar functionality to Smalltalk's Collection objects. It includes: Set, Bag, Array, LinkedList, LinkList, CircularArray, Queue, Stack, Heap, SortedArray, MappedCollector, GapArray and DelegateList. Version: Alpha Release. ftp://iesd.auc.dk/pub/ObjC/. See also: Objectionable-C.
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