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6-letter words containing v

  • cheven — A river fish, the chub.
  • chevet — a semicircular or polygonal east end of a church, esp a French Gothic church, often with a number of attached apses
  • chevon — the flesh of goats, used as food.
  • chevre — a cheese made from goats' milk
  • chives — Chives are the long thin hollow green leaves of a herb with purple flowers. Chives are cut into small pieces and added to food to give it a flavour similar to onions.
  • chivvy — If you chivvy someone, you keep telling them to do something that they do not want to do.
  • civets — Plural form of civet.
  • civics — Civics is the study of the rights and duties of the citizens of a society.
  • civies — a variant spelling of civvies
  • civill — Archaic spelling of civil.
  • civils — (esp in names of companies) civil engineering
  • civism — good citizenship
  • civvie — Civilian, someone not in the military.
  • claver — to talk idly; gossip
  • claves — one of a pair of wooden sticks or blocks that are held one in each hand and are struck together to accompany music and dancing.
  • clavie — a tar-barrel traditionally set alight in Moray on Hogmanay
  • clavis — a key
  • clavus — a corn on the toe
  • cleave — To cleave something means to split or divide it into two separate parts, often violently.
  • cleeve — a cliff
  • clever — Someone who is clever is intelligent and able to understand things easily or plan things well.
  • cleves — Per Teodor [par tey-aw-dawr] /pær ˈteɪ ɔˌdɔr/ (Show IPA), 1840–1905, Swedish chemist.
  • clevis — the U-shaped component of a shackle for attaching a drawbar to a plough or similar implement
  • cliver — (obsolete, or, dialectal) clever.
  • clivia — a plant belonging to the family Amaryllidaceae
  • cloven — split; cleft; divided
  • clover — Clover is a small plant with pink or white ball-shaped flowers.
  • cloves — Plural form of clove.
  • clovis — of or relating to a Paleo-Indian cultural tradition of North America, especially the American Southwest, dated 10,000–9000 b.c. and characterized by a usually bifacial, fluted stone projectile point (Clovis point) used in big-game hunting.
  • coeval — of or belonging to the same age or generation
  • convex — Convex is used to describe something that curves outwards in the middle.
  • convey — To convey information or feelings means to cause them to be known or understood by someone.
  • convoy — A convoy is a group of vehicles or ships travelling together.
  • 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.
  • corvid — a member of the passerine bird family Corvidae, which includes the crows, magpies, and jays, and the raven, rook, and jackdaw
  • corvus — a small quadrilateral-shaped constellation in the S hemisphere, lying between Virgo and Hydra
  • covary — to vary in correlation with another related variant
  • 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.
  • covina — a city in SW California, near Los Angeles.
  • coving — a concave curved surface between the wall and ceiling of a room
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