cliv
1cliv — ac·cliv·i·tous; ac·cliv·i·ty; cliv; de·cliv·i·tous; de·cliv·i·ty; pro·cliv·i·ty; de·cliv·i·tous·ly; …
2cliv|ers — «KLIHV uhrz», n.sing. and plural. = cleavers (the plant). (Cf. ↑cleavers) …
3cliv — «us (L). A slope …
4CLIV — матем. • Запись числа 154 римскими цифрами …
5cliv — ˈkliv Scotland variant of cloof …
6ac|cliv|i|tous — «uh KLIHV uh tuhs», adjective. sloping upward; acclivous …
7ac|cliv|i|ty — «uh KLIHV uh tee», noun, plural ties. an upward slope of ground. SYNONYM(S): ascent. ╂[< Latin acclīvitās < acclīvis ascending < ad toward + clīvus rising ground] …
8de|cliv|i|tous — «dih KLIHV uh tuhs», adjective. considerably steep: »There was a dangerous shower stall with a declivitous floor (New Yorker) …
9de|cliv|i|ty — «dih KLIHV uh tee», noun, plural ties. a downward slope: »The declivity of the mountain pass was so steep that even the mules had difficulty. SYNONYM(S): descent, inclination, gradient. ╂[< Latin dēclīvitās < dēclīvis sloping downward <… …
10pro|cliv|i|ty — «proh KLIHV uh tee», noun, plural ties. tendency; inclination; predisposition; leaning; propensity: »The old woman had a proclivity for finding fault. There are many spots in Florida that attract people with a proclivity for uncrowded but urbane… …