CONVERTIVE | • CONVERTIVE adj. relating to conversion. |
ENERVATIVE | • enervative adj. Causing enervation. • ENERVATIVE adj. having power, or a tendency, to enervate. |
INTERVOLVE | • intervolve v. (Rare) To involve one with another. • intervolve v. (Rare) To twist or coil together. • INTERVOLVE v. to roll up or entwine with one another. |
OVERDRIVEN | • overdriven adj. Driven too hard; exhausted. • overdriven adj. (Music) Characteristic of overdrive. • OVERDRIVE v. to drive to excess. |
OVERGOVERN | • overgovern v. (Transitive, intransitive) To govern with too much rigidity or precision. • OVERGOVERN v. to govern to excess. |
OVERINVEST | • overinvest v. To invest an excessive amount. |
OVERLEAVEN | • overleaven v. (Obsolete) To leaven too much. • overleaven v. (Obsolete, by extension) To change excessively; to spoil. • OVERLEAVEN v. to leaven too much. |
PREVENTIVE | • preventive adj. Preventing, hindering, or acting as an obstacle to. • preventive adj. Carried out to deter military aggression. • preventive adj. Slowing the development of an illness; prophylactic. |
REINVOLVED | • reinvolved v. Simple past tense and past participle of reinvolve. • REINVOLVE v. to involve anew. |
REINVOLVES | • reinvolves v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of reinvolve. • REINVOLVE v. to involve anew. |
RENOVATIVE | • renovative adj. Relating to renovation. • RENOVATIVE adj. serving to renovate. |
REVIVEMENT | • revivement n. (Obsolete) revival. • REVIVEMENT n. the act of reviving. |
REVOLVENCY | • revolvency n. (Now rare) The fact or act of revolving; capacity for revolution. • REVOLVENCY n. the act or state of revolving. |
VENERATIVE | • venerative adj. Of or relating to veneration. • VENERATIVE adj. of or relating to veneration or worship. |
VIVANDIERE | • vivandiere n. Alternative form of vivandière. • vivandière n. A female vivandier. • VIVANDIERE n. (French) a (female) attendant on a regiment, who sells provisions. |
VIVERRINES | • viverrines n. Plural of viverrine. • VIVERRINE n. a member of the ferret or civet family, also VIVERRA, VIVERRID. |