8-letter words containing v, e, r, b
- overbind — To bind or restrict to an excessive extent.
- overbite — occlusion in which the upper incisor teeth overlap the lower ones.
- overblew — Simple past form of overblow.
- overblow — to give excessive importance or value to: to overblow one's own writing.
- overboil — To boil excessively.
- overbold — Excessively bold.
- overbook — to accept reservations for in excess of the number that can be accommodated: The airline routinely overbooks its flights so as to fill its planes even if there are last-minute cancellations.
- overboot — overshoe.
- overbore — simple past tense of overbear.
- overborn — to bear over or down by weight or force: With his superior strength he easily overbore his opponent in the fight.
- overbred — to produce (offspring); procreate; engender.
- overbrim — To flow over the brim; to overflow.
- overbrow — (poetic, transitive) To hang over like a brow; to impend over.
- overbulk — to dwarf or loom over in an oppressive way
- overburn — to copy (information, music, etc) onto a CD over previously recorded data
- overbusy — Excessively busy.
- overbuys — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of overbuy.
- overclub — to use a club which causes the shot to go too far
- overdubs — Plural form of overdub.
- pro-verb — a word that can substitute for a verb or verb phrase, as do in They never attend board meetings, but we do regularly.
- provable — to establish the truth or genuineness of, as by evidence or argument: to prove one's claim.
- proverbs — a word that can substitute for a verb or verb phrase, as do in They never attend board meetings, but we do regularly.
- riverbed — the channel in which a river flows or formerly flowed.
- servable — to act as a servant.
- subcover — a set of subsets of a cover of a given set that also is a cover of the set.
- subserve — to be useful or instrumental in promoting (a purpose, action, etc.): Light exercise subserves digestion.
- svedberg — The(odor) [tey-oh-dawr] /ˈteɪ oʊˌdɔr/ (Show IPA), 1884–1971, Swedish chemist: Nobel prize 1926.
- vambrace — a piece of plate armor for the forearm; a lower cannon. Compare rerebrace.
- variable — apt or liable to vary or change; changeable: variable weather; variable moods.
- vartabed — (in the Armenian church) a doctor, master, or teacher
- verbally — of or relating to words: verbal ability.
- verbatim — word for word and letter for letter; in exactly the same words.
- verbiage — overabundance or superfluity of words, as in writing or speech; wordiness; verbosity.
- verbless — any member of a class of words that function as the main elements of predicates, that typically express action, state, or a relation between two things, and that may be inflected for tense, aspect, voice, mood, and to show agreement with their subject or object.
- verboten — forbidden, as by law; prohibited.
- vertebra — any of the bones or segments composing the spinal column, consisting typically of a cylindrical body and an arch with various processes, and forming a foramen, or opening, through which the spinal cord passes.
- vibrance — moving to and fro rapidly; vibrating.