7-letter words containing ve
- averted — to turn away or aside: to avert one's eyes.
- averter — a person who averts or turns aside
- avestan — the oldest recorded language of the Iranian branch of the Indo-European family; the language of the Avesta
- aveyron — a department of S France in Midi-Pyrénées region. Capital: Rodez. Pop: 266 940 (2003 est). Area: 8771 sq km (3421 sq miles)
- barnave — Antoine Pierre. 1761–93, French revolutionary. A prominent member of the National Assembly, he was executed for his royalist sympathies
- be-have — to act in a particular way; conduct or comport oneself or itself: The ship behaves well.
- beavers — Plural form of beaver.
- beavery — a place in which beavers may be kept
- beehive — A beehive is a structure in which bees are kept, which is designed so that the beekeeper can collect the honey that they produce.
- behaved — to act in a particular way; conduct or comport oneself or itself: The ship behaves well.
- behaver — something or someone who behaves
- behoove — If it behooves you to do something, it is right, necessary, or useful for you to do it.
- beknave — to treat as a knave
- believe — If you believe that something is true, you think that it is true, but you are not sure.
- beloved — A beloved person, thing, or place is one that you feel great affection for.
- bereave — to deprive (of) something or someone valued, esp through death
- beslave — to treat as a slave
- beveled — If a piece of wood, metal, or glass has beveled edges, its edges are cut sloping.
- beverly — a feminine name
- bilevel — having two levels
- bivalve — any marine or freshwater mollusc of the class Pelecypoda (formerly Bivalvia or Lamellibranchia), having a laterally compressed body, a shell consisting of two hinged valves, and gills for respiration. The group includes clams, cockles, oysters, and mussels
- bravely — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
- bravery — Bravery is brave behaviour or the quality of being brave.
- bravest — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
- brevete — patented
- btrieve — 1. (company) BTRIEVE Technologies, Inc.. 2. (tool) A trademark of BTRIEVE Technologies, Inc. for their ISAM index file manager for IBM PCs.
- buvette — a roadside café
- by jove — an exclamation of surprise or excitement
- cabover — of or denoting a truck or lorry in which the cab is over the engine
- cadaver — A cadaver is a dead body.
- caitive — a captive
- caliver — a light musket introduced in the early 16th century
- calvert — Sir George, 1st Baron Baltimore. ?1580–1632, English statesman; founder of the colony of Maryland
- captive — A captive person or animal is being kept imprisoned or enclosed.
- caravel — a two- or three-masted sailing ship, esp one with a broad beam, high poop deck, and lateen rig that was used by the Spanish and Portuguese in the 15th and 16th centuries
- carvers — a large matched knife and fork for carving meat
- carvery — an eating establishment at which customers pay a set price and may then have unrestricted helpings of food from a variety of meats, salads, and other vegetables
- cauvery — a river in S India, rising in the Western Ghats and flowing southeast to the Bay of Bengal. Length: 765 km (475 miles)
- cave in — If something such as a roof or a ceiling caves in, it collapses inwards.
- cave-in — a collapse, as of anything hollow: the worst cave-in in the history of mining.
- caveats — Plural form of caveat.
- caveman — Cavemen were people in prehistoric times who lived mainly in caves.
- cavemen — Plural form of caveman.
- caverns — Plural form of cavern.
- cavetto — a concave moulding, shaped to a quarter circle in cross section
- cervena — a trademarked set of quality standards for farm-produced venison
- cerveza — beer
- charver — a young woman
- charvet — a soft, lusterless silk or rayon tie fabric, often made with a faint stripe effect.
- cheever — John. 1912–82, US novelist and short-story writer. His novels include The Wapshot Chronicle (1957) and Bullet Park (1969)