These are the meanings of the letters GIVEY when you unscramble them.
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Give (n.)
To allow or admit by way of supposition.
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Give (n.)
To attribute; to assign; to adjudge.
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Give (n.)
To bestow without receiving a return; to confer without compensation; to impart, as a possession; to grant, as authority or permission; to yield up or allow.
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Give (n.)
To cause; to make; -- with the infinitive; as, to give one to understand, to know, etc.
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Give (n.)
To communicate or announce, as advice, tidings, etc.; to pronounce; to render or utter, as an opinion, a judgment, a sentence, a shout, etc.
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Give (n.)
To devote; to apply; used reflexively, to devote or apply one's self; as, the soldiers give themselves to plunder; also in this sense used very frequently in the past participle; as, the people are given to luxury and pleasure; the youth is given to study.
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Give (n.)
To excite or cause to exist, as a sensation; as, to give offense; to give pleasure or pain.
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Give (n.)
To exhibit as a product or result; to produce; to show; as, the number of men, divided by the number of ships, gives four hundred to each ship.
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Give (n.)
To grant power or license to; to permit; to allow; to license; to commission.
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Give (n.)
To pledge; as, to give one's word.
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Give (n.)
To set forth as a known quantity or a known relation, or as a premise from which to reason; -- used principally in the passive form given.
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Give (n.)
To yield possesion of; to deliver over, as property, in exchange for something; to pay; as, we give the value of what we buy.
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Give (n.)
To yield; to furnish; to produce; to emit; as, flint and steel give sparks.
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Give (v. i.)
To become soft or moist.
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Give (v. i.)
To give a gift or gifts.
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Give (v. i.)
To have a misgiving.
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Give (v. i.)
To move; to recede.
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Give (v. i.)
To open; to lead.
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Give (v. i.)
To shed tears; to weep.
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Give (v. i.)
To yield to force or pressure; to relax; to become less rigid; as, the earth gives under the feet.
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Gyve (n.)
A shackle; especially, one to confine the legs; a fetter.
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Gyve (v. t.)
To fetter; to shackle; to chain. H () the eighth letter of the English alphabet, is classed among the consonants, and is formed with the mouth organs in the same position as that of the succeeding vowel. It is used with certain consonants to form digraphs representing sounds which are not found in the alphabet, as sh, th, /, as in shall, thing, /ine (for zh see /274); also, to modify the sounds of some other letters, as when placed after c and p, with the former of which it represents a compound sound like that of tsh, as in charm (written also tch as in catch), with the latter, the sound of f, as in phase, phantom. In some words, mostly derived or introduced from foreign languages, h following c and g indicates that those consonants have the hard sound before e, i, and y, as in chemistry, chiromancy, chyle, Ghent, Ghibelline, etc.; in some others, ch has the sound of sh, as in chicane. See Guide to Pronunciation, // 153, 179, 181-3, 237-8.