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7-letter words containing e, l, v

  • nevilleRichard, Warwick, Earl of.
  • nonlove — Absence of love.
  • novella — a tale or short story of the type contained in the Decameron of Boccaccio.
  • novelle — a tale or short story of the type contained in the Decameron of Boccaccio.
  • novello — Ivor, real name Ivor Novello Davies. 1893–1951, Welsh actor, composer, songwriter, and dramatist
  • novelly — In a novel manner.
  • novelty — state or quality of being novel, new, or unique; newness: the novelty of a new job.
  • o level — a public examination for secondary-school students, usually 15 to 16 years old, testing basic knowledge in various subjects, required before advancing to more specialized courses of study.
  • occleve — Hoccleve.
  • ogilvieJohn, 1797–1867, Scottish lexicographer.
  • olivier — Laurence (Kerr) [kur;; British kahr,, kair] /kɜr;; British kɑr,, kɛər/ (Show IPA), (Baron Olivier of Brighton) 1907–89, English actor and director.
  • olivine — Mineralogy. any of a group of magnesium iron silicates, (Mg,Fe) 2 SiO 4 , occurring in olive-green to gray-green masses as an important constituent of basic igneous rocks.
  • orville — a male given name.
  • outlive — to live longer than; survive (a person, period, etc.): She outlived her husband by many years.
  • outlove — a profoundly tender, passionate affection for another person.
  • ovalize — Of a circle, to become stretched out in one direction, thereby becoming an oval.
  • overalloveralls, (used with a plural verb) loose, sturdy trousers, usually with a bib or biblike piece to which shoulder straps are attached, originally worn over other trousers to protect them, as by factory workers or farmers. long waterproof leggings.
  • overfly — to fly over (a specified area, territory, country, etc.): The plane lost its way and overflew foreign territory.
  • overlap — to lap over (something else or each other); extend over and cover a part of; imbricate.
  • overlax — too lax
  • overlay — to lie over or upon, as a covering or stratum.
  • overlea — a town in N Maryland, near Baltimore.
  • overlet — to let (a property) too often or to too many tenants
  • overlie — to lie over or upon, as a covering or stratum.
  • overply — to ply too much
  • overtly — openly; publicly.
  • ovulate — to produce and discharge eggs from an ovary or ovarian follicle.
  • p value — (statistics)   The probability that the opposite of some hypothesis is true, based on some set of results; a way of expressing the significance of a statistical observation. The lower the P value, the more significant the result. For example, if the hypothesis was "This vaccine prevents flu" then the opposite hypothesis (the "null hypothesis") would be "This vaccine has no effect on flu". If the occurence of flu was measured in a sample of people taking the vaccine then one might say that the hypothesis was confirmed with a p value of 5%. That would mean there was a 5% chance of obtaining the same results or better from a similar sample of the whole population even if the vaccine had no effect.
  • palaver — a conference or discussion.
  • pehlevi — the Pahlavi language.
  • plosive — (of a stop consonant or occlusive) characterized by release in a plosion; explosive.
  • plovery — characterized by or having many plovers
  • prevail — to be widespread or current; exist everywhere or generally: Silence prevailed along the funeral route.
  • r-value — a measure of the resistance of an insulating or building material to heat flow, expressed as R-11, R-20, and so on; the higher the number, the greater the resistance to heat flow.
  • raveled — to disentangle or unravel the threads or fibers of (a woven or knitted fabric, rope, etc.).
  • raveler — to disentangle or unravel the threads or fibers of (a woven or knitted fabric, rope, etc.).
  • ravelin — a V -shaped outwork outside the main ditch and covering the works between two bastions.
  • relevel — having no part higher than another; having a flat or even surface.
  • releves — a rising up onto full point or half point from the flat of the feet.
  • relieve — to ease or alleviate (pain, distress, anxiety, need, etc.).
  • relievo — Obsolete. relief2 (defs 2, 3).
  • relived — to experience again, as an emotion.
  • reliver — to deliver up again, to restore
  • removal — the act of removing.
  • replevy — to recover possession of by replevin.
  • resolve — to come to a definite or earnest decision about; determine (to do something): I have resolved that I shall live to the full.
  • revalue — to revise or reestimate the value of: efforts to revalue the dollar.
  • reveled — to take great pleasure or delight (usually followed by in): to revel in luxury.
  • reveler — to take great pleasure or delight (usually followed by in): to revel in luxury.
  • revelry — reveling; boisterous festivity: Their revelry could be heard across the river.
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