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7-letter words containing v, a

  • carvers — a large matched knife and fork for carving meat
  • carvery — an eating establishment at which customers pay a set price and may then have unrestricted helpings of food from a variety of meats, salads, and other vegetables
  • carving — A carving is an object or a design that has been cut out of a material such as stone or wood.
  • casevac — to evacuate (a casualty) from a combat zone, usually by air
  • cassava — Cassava is a South American plant with thick roots. It is grown for food.
  • cauvery — a river in S India, rising in the Western Ghats and flowing southeast to the Bay of Bengal. Length: 765 km (475 miles)
  • cavalla — any of various tropical carangid fishes, such as Gnathanodon speciosus (golden cavalla)
  • cavally — Caranx hippos, a carangoid fish of the Atlantic coast.
  • cavalry — The cavalry is the part of an army that uses armoured vehicles for fighting.
  • cave in — If something such as a roof or a ceiling caves in, it collapses inwards.
  • cave-in — a collapse, as of anything hollow: the worst cave-in in the history of mining.
  • caveats — Plural form of caveat.
  • caveman — Cavemen were people in prehistoric times who lived mainly in caves.
  • cavemen — Plural form of caveman.
  • caverns — Plural form of cavern.
  • cavetto — a concave moulding, shaped to a quarter circle in cross section
  • caviare — the roe of sturgeon, especially the beluga, or other fish, usually served as an hors d'oeuvre or appetizer.
  • caviled — Simple past tense and past participle of cavil.
  • caviler — a person who cavils
  • cavorts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cavort.
  • centavo — a monetary unit of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Cape Verde, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Guinea-Bissau, Honduras, Mexico, Mozambique, Nicaragua, and the Philippines. It is worth one hundredth of their respective standard units
  • cervena — a trademarked set of quality standards for farm-produced venison
  • cerveza — beer
  • charver — a young woman
  • charvet — a soft, lusterless silk or rayon tie fabric, often made with a faint stripe effect.
  • chauvin — a chauvinist
  • chavian — of or relating to chavs
  • chavish — a person who wears fashionable brands, flashy jewelry, etc., but is regarded as having bad or lower-class taste.
  • chivari — shivaree.
  • chkalov — former name of Orenburg.
  • chuvash — a Turkic ethnic people living chiefly in the middle Volga region of Russia
  • civitan — a member of Civitan International, a service club founded 1918.
  • civitas — the body of citizens who constitute a state, especially a city-state, commonwealth, or the like.
  • clavate — shaped like a club with the thicker end uppermost
  • clavers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of claver.
  • clavier — any keyboard instrument
  • clavius — one of the largest of the craters on the moon, about 230 kilometres (145 miles) in diameter, whose walls have peaks up to 5700 metres (19 000 feet) above the floor. It lies in the SE quadrant
  • clavola — the terminal, enlarged, usually club-shaped portion of a capitate, lamellate, or clavate antenna.
  • cleaved — Cleft or cloven.
  • cleaver — A cleaver is a knife with a large square blade, used for chopping meat or vegetables.
  • cleaves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cleave.
  • coaeval — a contemporary
  • coevals — Plural form of coeval.
  • concave — A surface that is concave curves inwards in the middle.
  • copaiva — Alternative form of copaiba.
  • cordova — Córdoba
  • corival — Alternative form of corrival.
  • corvina — a marine food fish, Menticirrhus undulatus, found in Pacific waters off Mexico and California
  • couvade — a custom in certain cultures of treating the husband of a woman giving birth as if he were bearing the child
  • covilhã — Pero da (ˈpeːrʊ da). ?1460–?1526, Portuguese explorer, who established relations between Portugal and Ethiopia
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