8-letter words containing r, e, v
- groveler — to humble oneself or act in an abject manner, as in great fear or utter servility.
- guaviare — a river in central and E Colombia, flowing E to the Orinoco River. 650 (1046 km) long.
- gulliver — (slang) one's head.
- handover — the act of relinquishing property, authority, etc.: a handover of occupied territory.
- hangover — the disagreeable physical aftereffects of drunkenness, such as a headache or stomach disorder, usually felt several hours after cessation of drinking.
- hannover — a member of the royal family that ruled Great Britain under that name from 1714 to 1901.
- harvests — Plural form of harvest.
- havering — a borough of Greater London, England.
- havocker — a person who causes havoc
- hayfever — Alternative spelling of hay fever.
- henry iv — 1050–1106, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire and king of Germany 1056–1106.
- henry vi — 1165–97, king of Germany 1190–97; king of Sicily 1194–97; emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1191–97 (son of Frederick I).
- hiveward — (of a bee's movement) towards the hive
- holdover — a person or thing remaining from a former period.
- hoovered — to clean with a vacuum cleaner.
- hoveller — (UK, dialect) One who assists in saving life and property from a wreck; a coast boatman.
- hovercar — A fictional motor car that hovers a short distance above the ground.
- hoverfly — Any of various flies from the family Syrphidae that hover in the air and feed on the nectar of flowers.
- hovering — Present participle of hover.
- hungover — hung (def 3).
- iarovize — to vernalize.
- improved — to bring into a more desirable or excellent condition: He took vitamins to improve his health.
- improver — a person or thing that improves.
- improves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of improve.
- incurved — Turned inwards.
- indeavor — Obsolete form of endeavor.
- indevour — Obsolete spelling of endeavour.
- ingroove — to cut a groove into
- innerved — Simple past tense and past participle of innerve.
- interval — an intervening period of time: an interval of 50 years.
- invaders — Plural form of invader.
- inventor — a person who invents, especially one who devises some new process, appliance, machine, or article; one who makes inventions.
- inverity — the state or quality of being untrue
- inversed — reversed in position, order, direction, or tendency.
- inverses — Plural form of inverse.
- inverted — to turn upside down.
- inverter — a person or thing that inverts.
- invertin — an enzyme, occurring in yeast and in the digestive juices of animals, that causes the inversion of cane sugar into invert sugar.
- invertor — any muscle that turns a limb or part inward.
- investor — to put (money) to use, by purchase or expenditure, in something offering potential profitable returns, as interest, income, or appreciation in value.
- invirile — unmanly
- invokers — Plural form of invoker.
- involver — Someone or something that involves.
- j'ouvert — the eve of Mardi gras; the Monday morning on which the festivities begin
- jarovize — to vernalize.
- kefauver — Estes [es-tis] /ˈɛs tɪs/ (Show IPA), 1903–63, U.S. political leader: U.S. senator 1949–63.
- kemerovo — a city in the S Russian Federation in Asia, NE of Novosibirsk.
- kristeva — Julia, born 1941, French literary theorist, critic, and psychoanalyst, born in Bulgaria.
- kullervo — (in the Kalevala) a slave who, after a series of tragic misadventures, commits suicide.
- kurveyor — a trader who transports goods by ox cart