Anagrams of Lovely
Word Lovely has
1 exact anagrams and 50 other words
that can be made by using the letters of Lovely.
- volley
-
noun,
the simultaneous discharge of a number of missiles or firearms.
- Lely
-
noun,
Sir Peter [pee-ter;; Dutch pey-tuh r] /ˈpi tər;; Dutch ˈpeɪ tər/ (Show IPA), (Pieter van der Faes) 1618–80, Dutch painter in England.
- vole
-
noun,
any of several small mouselike or ratlike rodents of the genus Microtus and related genera, having short limbs and a short tail.
- vel.
-
- ole-
-
- Love
-
noun,
a profoundly tender, passionate affection for another person.
- Lyle
-
noun,
a male given name.
- Levy
-
noun,
an imposing or collecting, as of a tax, by authority or force.
- Lev.
-
- 1080
-
- yell
-
noun,
a cry uttered by yelling.
- Loy
-
noun,
a female given name.
- Ell
-
noun,
an extension usually at right angles to one end of a building.
- lv.
-
- ov-
-
- LOE
-
noun, verb (used with or without object),
love.
- V-1
-
noun,
a robot bomb developed by the Germans in World War II and launched from bases on the ground, chiefly against England.
- ll.
-
- Ely
-
noun,
Isle of, a former administrative county in E England: now part of Cambridgeshire.
- lye
-
noun,
a highly concentrated, aqueous solution of potassium hydroxide or sodium hydroxide.
- V-2
-
noun,
a liquid-fueled rocket used as a ballistic missile by the Germans, mainly against London, late in World War II.
- eo-
-
- LEO
-
noun,
Astronomy. the Lion, a zodiacal constellation between Virgo and Cancer, containing the bright star Regulus.
- Yeo
-
- Ley
-
noun,
leu.
- vo.
-
- vol
-
- oy
-
noun,
a grandchild.
- VL
-
- V.
-
- EV
-
- E.
-
noun,
Edward (St. John) 1925–2000, U.S. writer and illustrator.
- ol
-
- yl
-
- OE
-
noun,
oy2 .
- O.
-
- ey
-
- el
-
noun,
Informal. elevated railroad.
- yo
-
interjection,
(used as an exclamation to get someone's attention, express excitement, greet someone, etc.)
- LO
-
adjective,
an informal, simplified spelling of low1 , used especially in labeling or advertising commercial products:
- Y.
-
- ye
-
pronoun,
Archaic, except in some elevated or ecclesiastical prose Literary, or British Dialect.
(used nominatively as the plural of thou especially in rhetorical, didactic, or poetic contexts, in addressing a group of persons or things):
(used nominatively for the second person singular, especially in polite address):
(used objectively in the second person singular or plural):
- le
-
- L2
-
- L1
-
- L.
-
- ly
-