6-letter words containing v, e
- clavie — a tar-barrel traditionally set alight in Moray on Hogmanay
- 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.
- cloven — split; cleft; divided
- clover — Clover is a small plant with pink or white ball-shaped flowers.
- cloves — Plural form of clove.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- craved — Simple past tense and past participle of crave.
- craven — Someone who is craven is very cowardly.
- craver — Someone who craves something.
- craves — to long for; want greatly; desire eagerly: to crave sweets; to crave affection.
- crevis — (UK, dialect) The crayfish.
- cruive — a cabin or hovel
- cuevas — José Luis [hoh-zey lwees;; Spanish haw-se lwees] /hoʊˈzeɪ lwis;; Spanish hɔˈsɛ lwis/ (Show IPA), born 1934, Mexican painter, graphic artist, and illustrator.
- culver — a dove or pigeon
- curved — A curved object has the shape of a curve or has a smoothly bending surface.
- curves — Plural form of curve.
- curvet — a low leap with all four feet off the ground
- curvey — curved.
- cuvier — Georges (Jean-Leopold-Nicolas-Frédéric) (ʒɔrʒ), Baron. 1769–1832, French zoologist and statesman; founder of the sciences of comparative anatomy and palaeontology
- dative — In the grammar of some languages, for example Latin, the dative, or the dative case, is the case used for a noun when it is the indirect object of a verb, or when it comes after some prepositions.
- davies — Sir John. 1569–1626, English poet, author of Orchestra or a Poem of Dancing (1596) and the philosophical poem Nosce Teipsum (1599)
- deevil — Eye dialect of devil.
- delved — Simple past tense and past participle of delve.
- delver — to carry on intensive and thorough research for data, information, or the like; investigate: to delve into the issue of prison reform.
- delves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of delve.
- denver — a city in central Colorado: the state capital. Pop: 557 478 (2003 est)
- derive — If you derive something such as pleasure or benefit from a person or from something, you get it from them.
- devall — a stop; cessation
- devast — (obsolete) To devastate.
- devein — (generally) to remove a vein or veins from
- devers — Gail, born 1966, U.S. track athlete.