8-letter words containing t, o, v, e
- overtake — to catch up with in traveling or pursuit; draw even with: By taking a cab to the next town, we managed to overtake and board the train.
- overtalk — to communicate or exchange ideas, information, etc., by speaking: to talk about poetry.
- overtame — too tame
- overtart — too bitter
- overtask — to impose too heavy a task upon
- overteem — to produce or breed excessively
- overthin — too thin
- overtime — working time before or after one's regularly scheduled working hours; extra working time.
- overtire — to make or become too tired
- overtoil — to work too hard
- overtone — Music. an acoustical frequency that is higher in frequency than the fundamental.
- overtook — simple past tense of overtake.
- overtrim — to trim too much
- overtrip — to tread lightly over
- overture — an opening or initiating move toward negotiations, a new relationship, an agreement, etc.; a formal or informal proposal or offer: overtures of peace; a shy man who rarely made overtures of friendship.
- overturn — to destroy the power of; overthrow; defeat; vanquish.
- overtype — to replace (typed text) by typing new text in the same place
- overvote — to cast more than the allowed number of votes
- positive — admitting of no question: positive proof.
- postdive — following a dive, esp a scuba dive
- put over — to move or place (anything) so as to get it into or out of a specific location or position: to put a book on the shelf.
- ravigote — a highly seasoned velouté with white wine and vinegar, butter, cream, and mushrooms cooked in liquor, usually served hot with variety meats and poultry.
- renovate — to restore to good condition; make new or as if new again; repair.
- retrovir — a brand of the drug zidovudine
- revolted — to break away from or rise against constituted authority, as by open rebellion; cast off allegiance or subjection to those in authority; rebel; mutiny: to revolt against the present government.
- revolute — rolled backward or downward; rolled backward at the tip or margin, as a leaf.
- rotative — rotating or pertaining to rotation.
- rotovate — to break up (the surface of the earth, or an area of ground) using a Rotavator
- servitor — a person who is in or at the service of another; attendant.
- shove it — to move along by force from behind; push.
- sit over — to be seated in an advantageous position on the left of (the player)
- solutive — a solvent or laxative
- solvated — a compound formed by the interaction of a solvent and a solute.
- solvates — a compound formed by the interaction of a solvent and a solute.
- solvents — able to pay all just debts.
- sorptive — the state or process of being sorbed.
- sovietic — relating to the Soviet Union
- sportive — playful or frolicsome; jesting, jocose, or merry: a sportive puppy.
- stepover — an instance of raising the foot over the ball while in possession in order to wrong-foot an opponent
- stopover — a brief stop in the course of a journey, as to eat, sleep, or visit friends.
- stovaine — a drug used for anaesthetic purposes and as a cocaine substitute
- stovetop — the upper surface of a stove, especially the area used for cooking: a stovetop cluttered with unwashed pots and pans.
- subovate — almost egg-shaped
- takeover — the act of seizing, appropriating, or arrogating authority, control, management, etc.
- tchekhov — Anton Pavlovich [an-ton pav-loh-vich;; Russian uhn-tawn puh-vlaw-vyich] /ˈæn tɒn pævˈloʊ vɪtʃ;; Russian ʌnˈtɔn pʌˈvlɔ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1860–1904, Russian short-story writer and dramatist.
- tevatron — an accelerator in which protons or antiprotons are raised to energies of a few trillion electron-volts.
- the dove — a manifestation of the Holy Spirit (John 1:32)
- the oval — a cricket ground in south London, in the borough of Lambeth
- tip over — to cause to assume a slanting or sloping position; incline; tilt.
- tiverton — a town in SE Rhode Island.