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7-letter words containing v, e, s

  • versute — cunning or crafty
  • vesical — of or relating to a vesica or bladder, especially the urinary bladder.
  • vesicle — a small sac or cyst.
  • vesico- — bladder
  • vespers — (initial capital letter) the evening star, especially Venus; Hesperus.
  • vespine — of or relating to wasps.
  • vespoid — like a wasp
  • vessels — a craft for traveling on water, now usually one larger than an ordinary rowboat; a ship or boat.
  • vestige — a mark, trace, or visible evidence of something that is no longer present or in existence: A few columns were the last vestiges of a Greek temple.
  • vesting — a close-fitting, waist-length, sleeveless garment that buttons down the front, designed to be worn under a jacket.
  • vestral — a room in or a building attached to a church, in which the vestments, and sometimes liturgical objects, are kept; sacristy.
  • vesture — Law. everything growing on and covering the land, with the exception of trees. any such covering, as grass or wheat.
  • vickersJon, born 1926, Canadian operatic tenor.
  • viersen — a city in North Rhine-Westphalia in W central Germany.
  • villose — villous.
  • vinasse — the residuum in a still after distillation; slop.
  • virtues — moral excellence; goodness; righteousness.
  • viruses — an ultramicroscopic (20 to 300 nm in diameter), metabolically inert, infectious agent that replicates only within the cells of living hosts, mainly bacteria, plants, and animals: composed of an RNA or DNA core, a protein coat, and, in more complex types, a surrounding envelope.
  • visaged — the face, usually with reference to shape, features, expression, etc.; countenance.
  • viscera — Viscera are the large organs inside the body, such as the heart, liver, and stomach.
  • viscose — a viscous solution prepared by treating cellulose with caustic soda and carbon bisulfide: used in manufacturing regenerated cellulose fibers, sheets, or tubes, as rayon or cellophane.
  • visible — that can be seen; perceptible to the eye: mountains visible in the distance.
  • visited — to go to and stay with (a person or family) or at (a place) for a short time for reasons of sociability, politeness, business, curiosity, etc.: to visit a friend; to visit clients; to visit Paris.
  • visitee — a person who is visited
  • vistaed — possessing or forming a vista or vistas.
  • vitebsk — a city in NE Byelorussia (Belarus), on the Dvina River.
  • vitesse — speed
  • vittlesvictuals, food supplies; provisions.
  • voetsek — an expression of dismissal or rejection
  • volutes — a spiral or twisted formation or object.
  • vorsterBalthazar Johannes, 1915–83, South African political leader: prime minister 1966–78; president 1978–79.
  • votress — a votaress.
  • vouches — to support as being true, certain, reliable, etc. (usually followed by for): Her record in office vouches for her integrity.
  • voyeuse — a chair of the 18th century used at game tables, having a padded top rail on which spectators could lean.
  • vriesia — any of numerous tropical American epiphytic bromeliads of the genus Vriesia, many species of which are cultivated for their rosettes of variegated leaves and showy flower spikes.
  • waivers — Plural form of waiver.
  • waveson — goods floating on the waves after a shipwreck
  • weavers — Plural form of weaver.
  • weevers — Plural form of weever.
  • weevils — Plural form of weevil.
  • wharves — Spinning. a wheel or round piece of wood on a spindle, serving as a flywheel or as a pulley.
  • whatevs — Whatevs is a rude way of saying 'whatever', and shows that the speaker does not respect what someone has just said to them.
  • wyverns — Plural form of wyvern.
  • yeshiva — an Orthodox Jewish school for the religious and secular education of children of elementary school age.
  • zemstvo — one of a system of elected local assemblies established in 1864 by Alexander II to replace the authority of the nobles in administering local affairs after the abolition of serfdom: became the core of the liberal movement from 1905 to 1917.
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