7-letter words that end in ey
- dempsey — Jack. real name William Harrison Dempsey. 1895–1983, US boxer; world heavyweight champion (1919–26)
- diddley — Bo [boh] /boʊ/ (Show IPA), (Elias McDaniel) 1928–2008, U.S. rock-'n'-roll singer, guitarist, and composer.
- dilthey — Wilhelm1833-1911; Ger. philosopher
- disobey — Fail to obey (rules, a command, or someone in authority).
- douchey — (slang, derogatory) Characteristic of a douche (jerk).
- dowlney — light, soft, and fluffy
- fiddley — the vertical space above a vessel's engine room extending into its stack, usually covered by an iron grating. Also applied to the framework around the opening itself
- flunkey — flunky.
- frawzey — a celebration; treat
- fridley — a city in SE Minnesota, near Minneapolis.
- frowney — (chat) (Or "frowney face") See emoticon.
- fruchey — ErrorTitleDiv {.
- gaffney — a city in N South Carolina.
- garagey — Resembling garage music (amateur guitar rock).
- godfrey — a male given name: from Germanic words meaning “god” and “peace.”.
- gormley — Sir Antony. born 1950, British sculptor, noted for Angel of the North (1998) and Another Place (1997), an installation of cast-iron figures facing out to sea on Crosby beach, near Liverpool
- greeley — Horace, 1811–72, U.S. journalist, editor, and political leader.
- grungey — Alternative form of grungy.
- hackney — Also called hackney coach. a carriage or coach for hire; cab.
- hartley — David, 1705–57, English physician and philosopher.
- haughey — Charles James. 1925–2006, Irish politician; leader of the Fianna Fáil party; prime minister of the Republic of Ireland (1979–81; 1982; 1987–92)
- hershey — Alfred Day, 1908–97, U.S. biologist: helped lay the foundation of modern molecular genetics; Nobel Prize in Medicine 1969.
- hockney — David, born 1937, British artist.
- hot key — an assigned key or sequence of keys programmed to execute a command or perform a specific task in a software application: On Windows computers, the hotkey Ctrl+S can be used to quickly save a file.
- jeepney — a Philippine twin-benched jitney bus, seating about a dozen passengers.
- jeffrey — Francis ("Lord Jeffrey") 1773–1850, Scottish jurist, editor, and critic.
- jockney — the Scots dialect influenced by cockney speech patterns
- joffrey — Robert (Abdullah Jaffa Bey Khan) 1930–1988, U.S. ballet dancer, choreographer, and dance company director.
- journey — a traveling from one place to another, usually taking a rather long time; trip: a six-day journey across the desert.
- kearney — a city in S Nebraska, on the Platte.
- kludgey — Alternative form of kludgy.
- kouprey — a wild ox, Bibos (Novibos) sauveli, of Laos and Cambodia, having a blackish-brown body with white markings on the back and feet: an endangered species.
- lacquey — a servile follower; toady.
- lamprey — any eellike marine or freshwater fish of the order Petromyzoniformes, having a circular, suctorial mouth with horny teeth for boring into the flesh of other fishes to feed on their blood.
- langley — Edmund of, York, 1st Duke of.
- lindley — John, 1799–1865, English botanist.
- lindsey — Ben(jamin Barr) [bahr] /bɑr/ (Show IPA), 1869–1943, U.S. jurist and authority on juvenile delinquency.
- loungey — suggestive of a lounge bar or easy-listening music
- low key — of reduced intensity; restrained; understated.
- low-key — of reduced intensity; restrained; understated.
- lyautey — Louis Hubert Gonzalve [lwee y-ber gawn-zalv] /lwi üˈbɛr gɔ̃ˈzalv/ (Show IPA), 1854–1934, French marshal: resident general of Morocco 1912–16, 1917–25.
- malmsey — a strong, sweet wine with a strong flavor, originally made in Greece but now made mainly in Madeira.
- mockney — a person who affects a cockney accent
- moseley — Henry Gwyn Jeffreys [gwin] /gwɪn/ (Show IPA), 1887–1915, English physicist: pioneer in x-ray spectroscopy.
- nut key — a tool for extracting a nut, chock, etc, from a crack after use
- o'casey — Sean [shawn,, shahn] /ʃɔn,, ʃɑn/ (Show IPA), 1880–1964, Irish playwright.
- odyssey — (italics) an epic poem attributed to Homer, describing Odysseus's adventures in his ten-year attempt to return home to Ithaca after the Trojan War.
- off key — deviating from the correct tone or pitch; out of tune.
- off-key — deviating from the correct tone or pitch; out of tune.
- orangey — resembling or suggesting an orange, as in taste, appearance, or color: decorated with orangy-pink flowers.