These are the meanings of the letters VGEENR when you unscramble them.
- Genre (n.)
A style of painting, sculpture, or other imitative art, which illustrates everyday life and manners.
- Green (n.)
A grassy plain or plat; a piece of ground covered with verdant herbage; as, the village green.
- Green (n.)
Any substance or pigment of a green color.
- Green (n.)
Fresh leaves or branches of trees or other plants; wreaths; -- usually in the plural.
- Green (n.)
pl. Leaves and stems of young plants, as spinach, beets, etc., which in their green state are boiled for food.
- Green (n.)
The color of growing plants; the color of the solar spectrum intermediate between the yellow and the blue.
- Green (superl.)
Full of life aud vigor; fresh and vigorous; new; recent; as, a green manhood; a green wound.
- Green (superl.)
Having a sickly color; wan.
- Green (superl.)
Having the color of grass when fresh and growing; resembling that color of the solar spectrum which is between the yellow and the blue; verdant; emerald.
- Green (superl.)
Immature in age or experience; young; raw; not trained; awkward; as, green in years or judgment.
- Green (superl.)
Not ripe; immature; not fully grown or ripened; as, green fruit, corn, vegetables, etc.
- Green (superl.)
Not roasted; half raw.
- Green (superl.)
Not seasoned; not dry; containing its natural juices; as, green wood, timber, etc.
- Green (v. i.)
To become or grow green.
- Green (v. t.)
To make green.
- Nerve (n.)
A sinew or a tendon.
- Nerve (n.)
Audacity; assurance.
- Nerve (n.)
One of the nervures, or veins, in the wings of insects.
- Nerve (n.)
One of the principal fibrovascular bundles or ribs of a leaf, especially when these extend straight from the base or the midrib of the leaf.
- Nerve (n.)
One of the whitish and elastic bundles of fibers, with the accompanying tissues, which transmit nervous impulses between nerve centers and various parts of the animal body.
- Nerve (n.)
Physical force or steadiness; muscular power and control; constitutional vigor.
- Nerve (n.)
Steadiness and firmness of mind; self-command in personal danger, or under suffering; unshaken courage and endurance; coolness; pluck; resolution.
- Nerve (v. t.)
To give strength or vigor to; to supply with force; as, fear nerved his arm.
- Never (adv.)
In no degree; not in the least; not.
- Never (adv.)
Not ever; not at any time; at no time, whether past, present, or future.
- Venge (v. t.)
To avenge; to punish; to revenge.
- Verge (n.)
A border, limit, or boundary of a space; an edge, margin, or brink of something definite in extent.
- Verge (n.)
A circumference; a circle; a ring.
- Verge (n.)
A rod or staff, carried as an emblem of authority; as, the verge, carried before a dean.
- Verge (n.)
A slip of grass adjoining gravel walks, and dividing them from the borders in a parterre.
- Verge (n.)
A virgate; a yardland.
- Verge (n.)
The compass of the court of Marshalsea and the Palace court, within which the lord steward and the marshal of the king's household had special jurisdiction; -- so called from the verge, or staff, which the marshal bore.
- Verge (n.)
The edge of the tiling projecting over the gable of a roof.
- Verge (n.)
The edge or outside of a bed or border.
- Verge (n.)
The external male organ of certain mollusks, worms, etc. See Illustration in Appendix.
- Verge (n.)
The penis.
- Verge (n.)
The shaft of a column, or a small ornamental shaft.
- Verge (n.)
The spindle of a watch balance, especially one with pallets, as in the old vertical escapement. See under Escapement.
- Verge (n.)
The stick or wand with which persons were formerly admitted tenants, they holding it in the hand, and swearing fealty to the lord. Such tenants were called tenants by the verge.
- Verge (v. i.)
To border upon; to tend; to incline; to come near; to approach.
- Verge (v. i.)
To tend downward; to bend; to slope; as, a hill verges to the north.