💡 Words with a Similar Meaning to "Overleave"
Found via reverse dictionary — words that share a conceptual meaning.
| Word | Definition |
|---|---|
| overleapverb | (transitive) To leap over, to jump over, to cross by jumping. |
| leave oververb | (British, transitive) To allow a portion to remain unused or unconsumed. |
| forleaveverb | (ambitransitive, obsolete) To depart from (someone); leave (someone) behind; abandon; forsake; desert; give up; relinquish. |
| leave behindverb | (transitive, idiomatic) To abandon. |
| leaveverb | (transitive) To cause or allow (something) to remain as available; to refrain from taking (something) away; to stop short of consuming or otherwise depleting (something) entirely. |
| unleaveverb | (transitive) To remove the leaves from. |
| overleavenverb | To leaven too much. |
| lie oververb | (intransitive) To be deferred to a future occasion. |
| beleaveverb | (obsolete, transitive) To leave behind, abandon. |
| leave beverb | Synonym of let be (“to leave alone; not to disturb”). |
| forgetverb | (transitive) To lose remembrance of. |
| disleaveverb | (transitive) Alternative spelling of disleaf. [(transitive, rare or obsolete) To remove the leaves from.] |
| overjumpverb | (transitive) To jump over. |
| omitverb | (transitive) To leave out or exclude. |
| overgiveverb | (ambitransitive) To give too lavishly. |
| pass oververb | (transitive with over as adverbial particle) To bypass or disregard in favour of someone or something else. |
| oversitverb | (intransitive) To spend too much time sitting. |
| leave offverb | (informal) To desist; to cease. |
| overdropverb | (transitive) To drop over; to overhang. |
| overslipnoun | (transitive) To slip or slide over; to pass easily or carelessly beyond. |
Translate “Overleave” into Another Language
Pick a language — the word will be pre-filled in the translator.