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7-letter words containing ve

  • chilver — A female lamb.
  • clavers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of claver.
  • cleaved — Cleft or cloven.
  • cleaver — A cleaver is a knife with a large square blade, used for chopping meat or vegetables.
  • cleaves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cleave.
  • clivers — cleavers.
  • clovers — Plural form of clover.
  • clovery — relating to clover; covered in clover
  • commove — to disturb; stir up
  • concave — A surface that is concave curves inwards in the middle.
  • connive — If one person connives with another to do something, they secretly try to achieve something which will benefit both of them.
  • convect — to circulate (hot air) by convection
  • convene — If someone convenes a meeting or conference, they arrange for it to take place. You can also say that people convene or that a meeting convenes.
  • convent — A convent is a building in which a community of nuns live.
  • convert — If you convert a vehicle or piece of equipment, you change it so that it can use a different fuel.
  • conveys — to carry, bring, or take from one place to another; transport; bear.
  • convive — to feast together
  • corsive — a corrosive drug
  • costive — having constipation; constipated
  • covelet — a small cove
  • covener — A member of a coven.
  • covered — A covered area is an area that has a roof.
  • coverer — Agent noun of cover; one who covers.
  • coverts — concealed; secret; disguised.
  • coverup — an attempt to keep blunders, crimes, etc. from being disclosed
  • coveted — You use coveted to describe something that very many people would like to have.
  • coveter — to desire wrongfully, inordinately, or without due regard for the rights of others: to covet another's property.
  • cowives — Alternative form of co-wives.
  • cravens — Plural form of craven.
  • crivens — an exclamation of surprise, now more commonly used for comedic effect
  • culvert — A culvert is a water pipe or sewer that crosses under a road or railway.
  • cursive — of or relating to handwriting in which letters are formed and joined in a rapid flowing style
  • curvets — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of curvet.
  • cutover — an area cleared of timber
  • cuvette — a shallow dish or vessel for holding liquid
  • danvers — a town in NE Massachusetts, near Boston.
  • datives — Plural form of dative.
  • de duve — Christian. 1917–2013, Belgian biochemist, who discovered lysosomes: shared the Nobel prize (1974) for his work in cell biology
  • de vega — Lope [loh-pey,, -pee;; Spanish law-pe] /ˈloʊ peɪ,, -pi;; Spanish ˈlɔ pɛ/ (Show IPA), (Lope Félix de Vega Carpio) 1562–1635, Spanish dramatist and poet.
  • de vereEdward, 17th Earl of Oxford, 1550–1604, English poet and dramatist, held by some to be the true author of Shakespeare's plays.
  • deceave — Obsolete form of deceive.
  • deceive — If you deceive someone, you make them believe something that is not true, usually in order to get some advantage for yourself.
  • decieve — Misspelling of deceive.
  • declive — declivous.
  • decurve — to curve in a declining manner
  • deglove — To peel back the skin from part of the body as if removing a glove, especially as the result of an accident.
  • deleave — to separate copies of (printed material)
  • deliver — If you deliver something somewhere, you take it there.
  • deneuve — Catherine, original name Catherine Dorléac. born 1943, French film actress: her films include Les Parapluies de Cherbourg (1964), Belle de jour (1967), Indochine (1992), and Dancer in the Dark (2000)
  • deprave — Something that depraves someone makes them morally bad or evil.
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