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6-letter words containing e, v, a

  • garvey — a scowlike open boat, variously propelled, used by oyster and clam fishermen in Delaware Bay and off the coasts of Delaware and New Jersey.
  • garvie — a sprat
  • gavage — forced feeding, as by a flexible tube and a force pump.
  • gavels — Plural form of gavel.
  • gavest — (archaic) second-person singular past of give.
  • geneva — a city in and the capital of the canton of Geneva, in SW Switzerland, on the Lake of Geneva: seat of the League of Nations 1920–46.
  • genova — Italian name of Genoa.
  • gevalt — help
  • glaive — a sword or broadsword.
  • goaves — plural of goaf.
  • gonave — Also called Gonâve Island. an island in the Gulf of Gonaïves, in W Haiti. 287 sq. mi. (743 sq. km).
  • graved — to clean and apply a protective composition of tar to (the bottom of a ship).
  • gravel — small stones and pebbles, or a mixture of these with sand.
  • graven — a past participle of grave3 .
  • graver — the grave accent.
  • graves — the grave accent.
  • greave — a piece of plate armor for the leg between the knee and the ankle, usually composed of front and back pieces.
  • haleviJudah, Judah ha-Levi.
  • halevy — Fromental [fraw-mahn-tal] /frɔ mɑ̃ˈtal/ (Show IPA), (Jacques François Fromental Élie Lévy) 1790–1862, French composer, especially of operas.
  • halved — Simple past tense and past participle of halve.
  • halver — A fisherman who places a net to catch fish in the retreating tide.
  • halves — plural of half.
  • harveyWilliam, 1578–1657, English physician: discoverer of the circulation of the blood.
  • haveli — A mansion.
  • havens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of haven.
  • havent — (informal, nonstandard) Alternative form of haven't.
  • havers — to equivocate; vacillate.
  • havest — Archaic second-person singular form of have.
  • havier — A castrated deer.
  • heaved — to raise or lift with effort or force; hoist: to heave a heavy ax.
  • heaven — the abode of God, the angels, and the spirits of the righteous after death; the place or state of existence of the blessed after the mortal life.
  • heaver — to raise or lift with effort or force; hoist: to heave a heavy ax.
  • heaves — to raise or lift with effort or force; hoist: to heave a heavy ax.
  • huelva — a seaport in SW Spain, near the Gulf of Cádiz.
  • impave — (archaic, poetic) To pave.
  • incave — to hide or enclose in a cave or as if in a cave
  • invade — to enter forcefully as an enemy; go into with hostile intent: Germany invaded Poland in 1939.
  • jahveh — Yahweh.
  • jarvey — a hackney coachman.
  • jayvee — a player on a junior varsity team.
  • kaleva — a hero and progenitor of heroes in Finnish and Estonian folk epics.
  • kaveri — a river in S India, flowing SE from the Western Ghats in Karnatka state through Tamil Nadu state to the Bay of Bengal: sacred to the Hindus. 475 miles (765 km) long.
  • keavie — an archaic Scottish dialect word for a species of crab
  • kevlar — Alternative capitalization of Kevlar.
  • kievan — of or relating to Kiev.
  • knaves — an unprincipled, untrustworthy, or dishonest person.
  • l wave — an earthquake wave that travels around the earth's surface and is usually the third conspicuous wave to reach a seismograph.
  • laevo- — on or towards the left
  • larvae — Entomology. the immature, wingless, feeding stage of an insect that undergoes complete metamorphosis.
  • lative — (grammar) A case of verbs, found in the Uralic and Northern Caucasian languages, used to indicate motion to a location; in the Northern Caucasian languages, the lative also takes up functions of the dative case.
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