| EELY | • eely adj. Resembling an eel: long, thin and slippery. • EELY adj. like an eel. |
| EERY | • eery adj. Alternative spelling of eerie. • EERY adj. uncanny, also EERIE. |
| EYED | • eyed adj. Having eyes. • eyed adj. Having eye-like spots. • eyed adj. (In compounds) Having the specified kind or number of eyes. |
| EYEN | • eyen n. (Dialectal or obsolete) plural of eye. • EYE n. the organ of sight. |
| EYER | • eyer n. One who eyes someone or something. • Eyer prop.n. A surname. • EYER n. one who eyes. |
| EYES | • eyes n. Plural of eye. • eyes v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of eye. • EYE v. to watch closely. |
| EYNE | • eyne n. (Obsolete) plural of eye. • EYE n. the organ of sight. |
| EYRE | • eyre n. (UK, law, historical) A journey in circuit of certain itinerant judges called justices in eyre (or in itinere). • Eyre prop.n. A surname. • EYRE n. (historical) a journey in circuit of certain judges called justices in eyre. |
| TYEE | • tyee n. (Canada) A large chinook salmon that weighs more than 13.5 kg. • TYEE n. a food fish. |
| YEDE | • yede v. (Obsolete) simple past tense of go, now replaced by went. • yede v. (Obsolete or literary) To go (used as a pseudo-archaism by 16th-century poets and their imitators). • YEDE v. (Spenser) to go or proceed, also YEAD, YEED. |
| YEED | • yeed v. (Obsolete) Alternative form of yede. • YEED v. (Spenser) to go or proceed, also YEAD, YEDE. |
| YEVE | • ye've cont. (Chiefly archaic, Ireland) ye have. • YEVE v. (obsolete) to give. |