7-letter words containing v, e
- veiling — a piece of opaque or transparent material worn over the face for concealment, for protection from the elements, or to enhance the appearance.
- veinier — full of veins; prominently veined: a veiny hand.
- veining — one of the system of branching vessels or tubes conveying blood from various parts of the body to the heart.
- veinlet — a small vein.
- veinous — having veins; veiny
- veinule — venule.
- veiovis — a god of the dead, sometimes believed to be of Etruscan origin.
- velamen — Anatomy. a membranous covering; velum.
- velaric — of or relating to velar speech sounds
- velated — Biology. having a velum.
- velbert — a city in North-Rhine–Westphalia, in the Ruhr district of W central Germany.
- velella — a floating colony of hydrozoans of the genus Velella, having a vertical crest that is used as a sail.
- veliger — a larval stage of certain mollusks, intermediate between the trochophore and the adult form.
- velites — light-armed troops in ancient Rome, drawn from the poorer classes
- vellore — a city in N Tamil Nadu state in S India, on the Palar River.
- veloute — a smooth white sauce made with meat, poultry, or fish stock.
- velvety — suggestive of or resembling velvet; smooth; soft: velvety rose petals; a velvety voice; a velvety cream sauce.
- venatic — of or relating to hunting.
- venator — a hunter
- vendace — a whitefish, Coregonus vandesius, inhabiting lakes in Scotland and England.
- vendage — the harvest of grapes
- vendean — of or relating to the Vendée or its inhabitants.
- venders — vendor.
- vending — to sell as one's business or occupation, especially by peddling: to vend flowers at a sidewalk stand.
- vendome — Louis Joseph de [lwee zhaw-zef duh] /lwi ʒɔˈzɛf də/ (Show IPA), 1654–1712, French general and marshal.
- vendors — a person or agency that sells.
- venefic — having poisonous effects
- venerer — a huntsman.
- venetia — an ancient district in NE Italy: later a Roman province bounded by the Alps, the Po River, and the Adriatic Sea.
- venetic — an Indo-European language of NE Italy, possibly belonging to the Italic branch, known from inscriptions from the 4th to 2nd centuries b.c.
- venezia — Also, Venetia. Also called Veneto [ve-ne-taw] /ˈvɛ nɛ tɔ/ (Show IPA). a region in NE Italy. 7095 sq. mi. (18,375 sq. km).
- venison — the flesh of a deer or similar animal as used for food.
- venomed — the poisonous fluid that some animals, as certain snakes and spiders, secrete and introduce into the bodies of their victims by biting, stinging, etc.
- venomer — something which secretes venom
- ventage — a small hole or vent, as one of the fingerholes of a flute.
- ventail — the pivoted middle element of a face defense of a close helmet.
- ventana — a window
- venting — the act of venting or expressing emotion
- ventose — (in the French Revolutionary calendar) the sixth month of the year, extending from February 19 to March 20.
- ventrad — toward the ventral side; ventrally.
- ventral — of or relating to the venter or belly; abdominal.
- ventri- — ventro-
- ventris — Michael George Francis, 1922–56, English architect and linguist.
- ventro- — abdomen, belly
- ventura — city in SW Calif., northwest of Los Angeles: pop. 101,000
- venture — an undertaking involving uncertainty as to the outcome, especially a risky or dangerous one: a mountain-climbing venture.
- venturi — Robert Charles, born 1925, U.S. architect.
- veranda — Also, verandah. Chiefly South Midland and Southern U.S. a large, open porch, usually roofed and partly enclosed, as by a railing, often extending across the front and sides of a house; gallery.
- verbage — overabundance or superfluity of words, as in writing or speech; wordiness; verbosity.
- verbals — abuse or invective