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6-letter words containing v, e, c

  • convey — To convey information or feelings means to cause them to be known or understood by someone.
  • coover — Robert (Lowell) born 1932, U.S. novelist and playwright.
  • corvee — day's unpaid labour owed by a feudal vassal to his lord
  • corves — corf
  • corvet — (nautical) archaic form of corvette.
  • covens — Plural form of coven.
  • covent — (obsolete) convent.
  • coverb — (grammar) Any of a class of words in various languages including Chinese and Hungarian whose function is analogous to the cases, prepositions and postpositions of other languages.
  • covers — coversed sine
  • covert — Covert activities or situations are secret or hidden.
  • covery — (rare) a dispelling of false or misleading notions.
  • covets — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of covet.
  • coveys — Plural form of covey.
  • craved — Simple past tense and past participle of crave.
  • craven — Someone who is craven is very cowardly.
  • craver — Someone who craves something.
  • craves — to long for; want greatly; desire eagerly: to crave sweets; to crave affection.
  • crevis — (UK, dialect) The crayfish.
  • cruive — a cabin or hovel
  • cuevas — José Luis [hoh-zey lwees;; Spanish haw-se lwees] /hoʊˈzeɪ lwis;; Spanish hɔˈsɛ lwis/ (Show IPA), born 1934, Mexican painter, graphic artist, and illustrator.
  • culver — a dove or pigeon
  • curved — A curved object has the shape of a curve or has a smoothly bending surface.
  • curves — Plural form of curve.
  • curvet — a low leap with all four feet off the ground
  • curvey — curved.
  • cuvier — Georges (Jean-Leopold-Nicolas-Frédéric) (ʒɔrʒ), Baron. 1769–1832, French zoologist and statesman; founder of the sciences of comparative anatomy and palaeontology
  • device — A device is an object that has been invented for a particular purpose, for example for recording or measuring something.
  • ecevit — Bülent [by-lent] /büˈlɛnt/ (Show IPA), 1925–2006, Turkish journalist and political leader: prime minister 1974, 1978–80, 1998–2002.
  • evicts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of evict.
  • evince — Reveal the presence of (a quality or feeling).
  • excave — (obsolete) To excavate.
  • incave — to hide or enclose in a cave or as if in a cave
  • invect — (obsolete) To inveigh.
  • kvetch — to complain, especially chronically.
  • mcvert — (tool)   A Unix program for reading and writing Apple Computer Macintosh binary files. It was written by Doug Moore, now at Rice University (Jan 1990). See BinHex, HQX, MacBinary.
  • novice — a person who is new to the circumstances, work, etc., in which he or she is placed; beginner; tyro: a novice in politics.
  • octave — Music. a tone on the eighth degree from a given tone. the interval encompassed by such tones. the harmonic combination of such tones. a series of tones, or of keys of an instrument, extending through this interval.
  • pelvic — of or relating to the pelvis.
  • sclave — a slave
  • scurve — a curve shaped like an S .
  • v neck — a neckline V-shaped in front.
  • v-neck — A V-neck or a V-neck sweater is a sweater with a neck that is in the shape of the letter V.
  • vacate — to give up possession or occupancy of: to vacate an apartment.
  • vachel — a male given name: from a Latin word meaning “little cow.”.
  • vaunce — to advance
  • vector — Mathematics. a quantity possessing both magnitude and direction, represented by an arrow the direction of which indicates the direction of the quantity and the length of which is proportional to the magnitude. Compare scalar (def 4). such a quantity with the additional requirement that such quantities obey the parallelogram law of addition. such a quantity with the additional requirement that such quantities are to transform in a particular way under changes of the coordinate system. any generalization of the above quantities.
  • vehmic — of or relating to a vehm
  • velcro — fastening tape used for garment closure
  • veloce — played at a fast tempo (used as a musical direction).
  • venice — Italian Venezia. a seaport in NE Italy, built on numerous small islands in the Lagoon of Venice.
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