| HAVOCKER | • havocker n. A person who causes havoc. • HAVOCKER n. one who wreaks havoc. |
| LAVEROCK | • laverock n. Alternative form of lark (“the bird”). • LAVEROCK n. (Scots) a songbird, the lark, also LAVROCK. • LAVEROCK v. to catch larks. |
| MAKEOVER | • makeover n. A major change in the use of something, or in the appearance of something or someone; a radical transformation. • make-over n. Alternative spelling of makeover. • make␣over v. (Idiomatic) To renovate or to convert to a different use, particularly houses, offices, or rooms within them. |
| OVERBAKE | • overbake v. (Transitive) To bake for too long. • OVERBAKE v. to bake too long. |
| OVERBANK | • overbank adj. (Geology) Describing sediments deposited on a floodplain from suspensions in floodwaters. • overbank v. (Of an aircraft) To bank excessively. • OVERBANK n. a stage of a river where it overflows its bank. |
| OVERPACK | • overpack v. (Intransitive) To pack too much. • overpack n. A container intended to hold smaller containers. • OVERPACK v. to pack to excess. |
| OVERRACK | • overrack v. (Archaic, transitive) To torture beyond bearing. • OVERRACK v. to overstrain. |
| OVERRAKE | • overrake v. (Transitive) To rake over, or sweep across, from end to end, as waves break over a vessel anchored with… • OVERRAKE v. to sweep over. |
| OVERRANK | • overrank adj. Too rank or luxuriant. • OVERRANK v. to assign an unnecessarily high rank to. |
| OVERSOAK | • oversoak v. (Transitive) To soak for too long. • OVERSOAK v. to soak too much. |
| OVERTAKE | • overtake v. To pass a slower moving object or entity (on the side closest to oncoming traffic). • overtake v. (Economics) To become greater than something else. • overtake v. To occur unexpectedly; take by surprise; surprise and overcome; carry away. |
| OVERTALK | • overtalk v. (Intransitive) To talk too much. • overtalk v. (Transitive) To overcome or persuade by talking; talk over. • overtalk v. (Transitive) To overstate; overexaggerate; talk up to seem greater than what is actual. |
| OVERTASK | • overtask v. (Transitive) To task too heavily; to give someone or something too many tasks; to overburden. • OVERTASK v. to impose too many tasks on. |
| OVERWEAK | • overweak adj. Excessively weak; too feeble. • OVERWEAK adj. too weak. |
| TAKEOVER | • takeover n. (Economics) The purchase of one company by another; a merger without the formation of a new company… • takeover n. (Economics, UK) The acquisition of a public company whose shares are listed on a stock exchange, in… • takeover n. A time or event in which control or authority, especially over a facility is passed from one party to the next. |
| VOERTSAK | • VOERTSAK interj. (South African) offensive, expressing rejection, also VOERTSEK, VOETSAK, VOETSEK. |
| WALKOVER | • walkover n. An easy victory; a walkaway. • walkover n. (Sports) A bye or victory awarded to a competitor when a scheduled opponent fails to play a game. • walkover n. A horse race with only one entrant. |