8-letter words containing ve
- enslaves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enslave.
- enveigle — Archaic form of inveigle.
- envelope — A flat paper container with a sealable flap, used to enclose a letter or document.
- envelops — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of envelop.
- envenoms — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of envenom.
- envolved — Simple past tense and past participle of envolve.
- envolves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of envolve.
- equative — (grammar) Of, pertaining to, or being an equative.
- erective — Making erect or upright; raising.
- ergative — Relating to or denoting a case of nouns (in some languages, e.g., Basque and Eskimo) that identifies the subject of a transitive verb and is different from the case that identifies the subject of an intransitive verb.
- eruptive — Of, relating to, or formed by volcanic activity.
- estovers — a right allowed by law to tenants of land to cut timber, esp for fuel and repairs
- evection — (astronomy) Modification of the lunar orbit due to the gravitational effects of the Sun.
- even out — become flatter or more level
- evenfall — Dusk, twilight.
- evenings — Plural form of evening.
- evenness — The quality of being even.
- evensong — (in the Christian Church) a service of evening prayers, psalms, and canticles, conducted according to a set form, especially that of the Anglican Church.
- eventers — Plural form of eventer.
- eventful — Marked by interesting or exciting events.
- eventide — The end of the day; evening.
- eventing — An equestrian sport in which competitors must take part in each of several contests, usually cross-country, dressage, and show jumping.
- eventual — Occurring at the end of or as a result of a series of events; final; ultimate.
- everlast — (intransitive) To last always or forever; continue; endure; remain.
- evermore — (chiefly used for rhetorical effect or in ecclesiastical contexts) always.
- eversion — An act of turning inside out.
- everting — Present participle of evert.
- everyday — Happening or used every day; daily.
- everyman — In fiction, drama, or allegory, the archetypical ordinary individual, frequently the protagonist in a parable of some sort.
- everyone — Every person.
- everyway — (dated) In every way, however possible.
- evesdrop — Archaic form of eavesdrop.
- evincive — Tending to prove; having the power to demonstrate; demonstrative; indicative.
- evolvent — an involute curve
- excisive — Relating to, or causing excision.
- exclaves — Plural form of exclave.
- excusive — tending to excuse; excusing
- exertive — Having power or a tendency to exert; using exertion.
- exessive — (grammar) Of, or relating to the grammatical case that in some languages indicates the transition away from a state.
- eyelevel — level with a person's eyes when looking straight ahead
- failover — A method of protecting computer systems from failure, in which standby equipment automatically takes over when the main system fails.
- fan oven — oven that works by convection
- fauvette — the French name, used by some English writers, for a family of birds more commonly known as warblers
- favelado — a person who lives in a favela.
- faveolus — a small pit or cavity resembling a cell of a honeycomb; alveola.
- fervence — Obsolete form of fervency.
- fervency — warmth or intensity of feeling; ardor; zeal; fervor.
- feverfew — a bushy composite plant, Chrysanthemum parthenium, bearing small white flowers, formerly used as a remedy for fever and headache.
- fevering — an abnormal condition of the body, characterized by undue rise in temperature, quickening of the pulse, and disturbance of various body functions.
- feverish — having fever.