6-letter words containing v, e
- lovein — a usually organized public gathering of people, held as a demonstration of mutual love or in protest against inhumane policies.
- lovell — Sir Alfred Charles Bernard, 1913–2012, British astronomer.
- lovely — charmingly or exquisitely beautiful: a lovely flower.
- lovers — Plural form of lover.
- lovest — (archaic) second-person singular present form of love.
- loveth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of love.
- loveys — Plural form of lovey.
- luvvie — Alternative spelling of luvvy.
- lvalue — (programming) A reference to a location, an expression which can appear as the destination of an assignment operator indicating where a value should be stored. For example, a variable or an array element are lvalues but the constant 42 and the expression i+1 are not. A constant string may or may not be an lvalue (it usually is in C).
- maglev — magnetic levitation.
- marvel — something that causes wonder, admiration, or astonishment; a wonderful thing; a wonder or prodigy: The new bridge is an engineering marvel.
- marver — a hard, flat surface of stone, wood, or metal, on which a mass of molten glass is rolled and shaped in glassmaking.
- mauver — a pale bluish purple.
- mauves — Plural form of mauve.
- mavens — An expert or connoisseur.
- may've — May've is a spoken form of 'may have', especially when 'have' is an auxiliary verb.
- mcvert — (tool) A Unix program for reading and writing Apple Computer Macintosh binary files. It was written by Doug Moore, now at Rice University (Jan 1990). See BinHex, HQX, MacBinary.
- melvin — a male given name.
- mervin — a male given name.
- mevrou — a South African title of address equivalent to Mrs when placed before a surname or madam when used alone
- mikveh — (Judaism) A ritual bath in which various Jewish purifications are performed.
- mohave — a member of a North American Indian tribe belonging to the Yuman linguistic family, formerly located in the Colorado River valley of Arizona and California.
- mojave — a member of a North American Indian tribe belonging to the Yuman linguistic family, formerly located in the Colorado River valley of Arizona and California.
- motive — something that causes a person to act in a certain way, do a certain thing, etc.; incentive.
- movent — (obsolete) Moving; that moves; that is being moved.
- movers — Plural form of mover.
- moveth — Archaic third-person singular form of move.
- movies — motion picture.
- musive — relating to or forming a mosaic
- muvver — Lb Cockney eye dialect of mother.
- naevus — (anatomy) A pigmented, raised or otherwise abnormal area on the skin. Naevi may be congenital or acquired. This term is reserved for benign skin lesions.
- naiver — Comparative form of naive.
- native — being the place or environment in which a person was born or a thing came into being: one's native land.
- navels — Plural form of navel.
- navies — the whole body of warships and auxiliaries belonging to a country or ruler.
- nerval — neural.
- nerved — Simple past tense and past participle of nerve.
- nerver — something that gives one courage, esp an alcoholic drink
- nerves — one or more bundles of fibers forming part of a system that conveys impulses of sensation, motion, etc., between the brain or spinal cord and other parts of the body.
- nevada — a state in the W United States. 110,540 sq. mi. (286,300 sq. km). Capital: Carson City. Abbreviation: NV (for use with zip code), Nev.
- nevers — a former province in central France. Capital: Nevers.
- neviim — the Prophets, being the second of the three Jewish divisions of the Old Testament.
- nevins — Allan, 1890–1971, U.S. historian.
- nevoid — any congenital anomaly of the skin, including moles and various types of birthmarks.
- nevski — Alexander, Alexander Nevski.
- niever — a frequent misspelling of naive.
- nieves — Plural form of nieve.
- nievre — a department in central France. 2659 sq. mi. (6885 sq. km). Capital: Nevers.
- nivose — (in the French Revolutionary calendar) the fourth month of the year, extending from December 21 to January 19.
- novate — To replace something with something new.