| IMPASSIVE | • impassive adj. Having, or revealing, no emotion. • impassive adj. Still or motionless. • IMPASSIVE adj. not showing feeling or emotion. |
| PASSIVISM | • passivism n. The quality or principle of being passive. • PASSIVISM n. the doctrine of being passive. |
| PASSIVIST | • passivist n. One who adopts a passive approach, or passivism. • PASSIVIST n. one who believes in passivism, the doctrine of being passive. |
| PASSIVITY | • passivity n. The state of being passive. • passivity n. Submissiveness. • passivity n. A lack of initiative. |
| PAVILIONS | • pavilions v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of pavilion. • PAVILION v. to cover with a large tent. |
| PRAVITIES | • pravities n. Plural of pravity. • PRAVITY n. wickedness. |
| PRIVACIES | • privacies n. Plural of privacy. • PRIVACY n. the state of being private. |
| PRIVATISE | • privatise v. Non-Oxford British spelling standard spelling of privatize. • PRIVATISE v. to transfer from ownership by the state into private ownership; to denationalize, also PRIVATIZE. |
| PRIVATISM | • privatism n. Concern only with issues inasmuch as they affect one as an individual; self-interest. • PRIVATISM n. a tendency to be concerned with ideas, matters, etc. only as affecting one as an individual. |
| PRIVATIST | • PRIVATIST n. one who believes in privatism. |
| RIVALSHIP | • rivalship n. (Now rare). Rivalry. • rivalship n. (Fandom slang) A ship involving characters with an adversarial relationship. • RIVALSHIP n. rivalry. |
| VAMPIRISE | • vampirise v. Alternative form of vampirize. • VAMPIRISE v. to play the vampire, also VAMPIRIZE. |
| VAMPIRISH | • vampirish adj. Pertaining to a vampire, characteristic of a vampire; photophobic, parasitic etc. • VAMPIRISH adj. like a vampire. |
| VAMPIRISM | • vampirism n. (Pathology) Systemic lupus erythematosus (autoimmune disease). • vampirism n. (Mythology) the state of being a vampire. • vampirism n. Practices associated with vampires, in particular blood-drinking and the draining of a victim’s life-force. |
| VICARSHIP | • vicarship n. The office or dignity of a vicar. • VICARSHIP n. the office or dignity of a vicar. |