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9-letter words containing v, e, n

  • grandview — a town in W Missouri.
  • granivore — Any animal that eats seeds as the main part of its diet.
  • granvilleEarl of, Carteret, John.
  • grapevine — a town in N Texas.
  • gravamens — Plural form of gravamen.
  • graveling — small stones and pebbles, or a mixture of these with sand.
  • graveness — serious or solemn; sober: a grave person; grave thoughts.
  • gravesend — a seaport in NW Kent, in SE England, on the Thames River: incorporated into Gravesham 1974.
  • grenvilleGeorge, 1712–70, British statesman: prime minister 1763–65.
  • grievance — a wrong considered as grounds for complaint, or something believed to cause distress: Inequitable taxation is the chief grievance.
  • grievants — Plural form of grievant.
  • groove on — enjoy, appreciate
  • grosvenorGilbert Hovey, 1875–1966, U.S. geographer, writer, and editor.
  • groveling — to humble oneself or act in an abject manner, as in great fear or utter servility.
  • guenevere — a female given name: from a Welsh word meaning “white, fair.”.
  • guinevere — Arthurian Romance. wife of King Arthur and mistress of Lancelot.
  • han river — a dynasty in China, 206 b.c.–a.d. 220, with an interregnum, a.d. 9–25: characterized by consolidation of the centralized imperial state and territorial expansion. Compare Earlier Han, Later Han.
  • hand over — the terminal, prehensile part of the upper limb in humans and other primates, consisting of the wrist, metacarpal area, fingers, and thumb.
  • handovers — Plural form of handover.
  • handwoven — made on a handloom; handloomed.
  • hang five — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • hang over — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • hangovers — Plural form of hangover.
  • have done — Usually, haves. an individual or group that has wealth, social position, or other material benefits (contrasted with have-not).
  • have-nots — people who are very poor
  • haversian — designating or of the canals through which blood vessels and connective tissue pass in bone
  • haversine — one half the versed sine of a given angle or arc.
  • heaviness — of great weight; hard to lift or carry: a heavy load.
  • heavy ion — the nucleus of a heavy element.
  • helvellyn — a mountain in NW England. 3118 feet (950 meters).
  • helvetian — of or relating to Helvetia or the Helvetii.
  • henry vii — ("Henry of Luxembourg") 1275?–1313, king of Germany 1309–13 and emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1312–13.
  • hive mind — the property of apparent sentience in a colony of social insects acting as a single organism, each insect performing a specific role for the good of the group.
  • hoovering — to clean with a vacuum cleaner.
  • hovelling — A method of securing a good draught in chimneys by covering the top, leaving openings in the sides, or by carrying up two of the sides higher than the other two.
  • hovhanessAlan, 1911–2000, U.S. composer.
  • hung over — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • hydrovane — a vane on a seaplane conferring stability on water (a sponson) or facilitating take off (a hydrofoil)
  • hypernova — (astronomy) The gravitational collapse of a massive star to form a black hole.
  • immensive — (obsolete) huge.
  • in clover — any of various plants of the genus Trifolium, of the legume family, having trifoliolate leaves and dense flower heads, many species of which, as T. pratense, are cultivated as forage plants.
  • in revolt — in the process or state of rebelling
  • in venter — conceived but not yet born
  • incendive — Able to ignite, or cause ignition.
  • incensive — Tending to excite or provoke; inflammatory.
  • incentive — something that incites or tends to incite to action or greater effort, as a reward offered for increased productivity.
  • inceptive — beginning; initial.
  • inclusive — including or encompassing the stated limit or extremes in consideration or account (usually used postpositively): from 6 to 37 inclusive.
  • incursive — making incursions.
  • incurvate — curved, especially inward.
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