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12-letter words containing v, e, n

  • hopkinsville — a city in S Kentucky.
  • horned viper — a highly venomous viper, Cerastes cerastes, of northern Africa and extreme southwestern Asia, having a process resembling a horn just above each eye.
  • hovering act — an act forbidding or restricting the loitering of foreign or domestic vessels within the prescribed limits of a coastal nation.
  • hudson riverHenry, died 1611? English navigator and explorer.
  • hypertensive — characterized by or causing high blood pressure.
  • Îles du vent — a group of islands in the S Pacific, in French Polynesia in the W Society Archipelago: Moorea, Maio (Tubuai Manu), and Mehetia and Tetiaroa. Pop: 184 222 (2002)
  • illuminative — giving light; illuminating.
  • illusiveness — illusory.
  • improvements — Plural form of improvement.
  • improvidence — not provident; lacking foresight; incautious; unwary.
  • in any event — whatever the situation
  • in overdrive — in a state of intense activity
  • in the event — You say in the event after you have been discussing what could have happened in a particular situation, in order to indicate that you are now describing what actually did happen.
  • in-effective — not effective; not producing results; ineffectual: ineffective efforts; ineffective remedies.
  • inadvertence — the quality or condition of being inadvertent; heedlessness.
  • inadvertency — inadvertence.
  • incentivised — Simple past tense and past participle of incentivise.
  • incentivises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of incentivise.
  • incentivized — to give incentives to: The government should incentivize the private sector to create jobs.
  • incentivizes — to give incentives to: The government should incentivize the private sector to create jobs.
  • inchoatively — in an inchoative or rudimentary fashion; initially
  • incisiveness — penetrating; cutting; biting; trenchant: an incisive tone of voice.
  • inclusive of — including; taking into account
  • inclusive or — the connective that gives the value true to a disjunction if either or both of the disjuncts are true
  • incogitative — Not cogitative; lacking the power of thought.
  • inconclusive — not conclusive; not resolving fully all doubts or questions: inconclusive evidence.
  • inconvenient — not easily accessible or at hand: The phone is in an inconvenient place.
  • inconversant — Not conversant or acquainted (with something); unfamiliar.
  • incorruptive — incorruptible; not tending to be corrupted
  • incrassative — A substance which has the power to thicken; formerly, a medicine supposed to thicken the humours.
  • indecisively — characterized by indecision, as persons; irresolute; undecided.
  • indian giver — a person who gives a gift and then takes it back.
  • indicatively — showing, signifying, or pointing out; expressive or suggestive (usually followed by of): behavior indicative of mental disorder.
  • indivertible — incapable of being diverted or turned aside
  • individuated — Simple past tense and past participle of individuate.
  • individuates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of individuate.
  • inequivalent — Not equivalent.
  • inequivalved — having the valves of the shell of a mollusk unequal in size
  • inexhaustive — not exhaustive; not thorough
  • inexpressive — not expressive; lacking in expression.
  • infiltrative — to filter into or through; permeate.
  • infinitively — a verb form found in many languages that functions as a noun or is used with auxiliary verbs, and that names the action or state without specifying the subject, as French venir “to come,” Latin esse “to be,” fuisse “to have been.”.
  • ingravescent — (esp of a disease) becoming more severe
  • initiatively — an introductory act or step; leading action: to take the initiative in making friends.
  • innervations — Plural form of innervation.
  • innocent vii — (Cosimo de' Migliorati) 1336–1406, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1404–06.
  • innovatively — tending to innovate, or introduce something new or different; characterized by innovation.
  • inobservable — Unobservable.
  • inobservance — lack of attention; inattention; heedlessness: drowsy inobservance.
  • input device — a peripheral device, as a keyboard or stylus, used to enter data into a computer for processing.
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