| ABSOLVERS | • absolvers n. Plural of absolver. • ABSOLVER n. one who absolves. |
| BESLAVERS | • beslavers v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of beslaver. • BESLAVER v. to slobber upon. |
| BOLIVARES | • bolivares n. Plural of bolivar. • BOLIVAR n. (Spanish) the monetary unit of Venezuela. |
| DEVERBALS | • deverbals n. Plural of deverbal. • DEVERBAL n. a word derived from a verb. |
| REVISABLE | • revisable adj. Able to be revised. • REVISABLE adj. that may be revised. |
| SERVEABLE | • serveable adj. Alternative form of servable. • SERVEABLE adj. capable of being served, also SERVABLE. |
| SEVERABLE | • severable adj. Capable of being severed. • severable adj. (Law, economics) Capable of being separated. • SEVERABLE adj. that can be severed. |
| SUBVERSAL | • SUBVERSAL n. the act of subverting. |
| SWERVABLE | • SWERVABLE adj. capable of being swerved. |
| VARIABLES | • variables n. Plural of variable. • VARIABLE n. something that varies. |
| VERBALISE | • verbalise v. Non-Oxford British spelling standard spelling of verbalize. • VERBALISE v. to put into words, also VERBALIZE. |
| VERBALISM | • verbalism n. The expression of a concept in words; the wording used in such an expression. • verbalism n. The excessive use of words, often with little meaning. • VERBALISM n. undue attention to words alone. |
| VERBALIST | • verbalist n. One who possesses verbal or oratorical skill. • verbalist n. One who favours words or the wording of something over its meaning or the idea behind it. • VERBALIST n. a person dealing in or concentrating on mere words rather than reality or meaning. |
| VIBRISSAL | • vibrissal adj. Of or pertaining to vibrissae. • VIBRISSAL adj. like a vibrissa, a sensitive whisker on an animal's face. |