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Evite is a website that lets you create and send invitations for various occasions, such as birthdays, weddings, showers and more. You can also browse themes, designs, gift ideas and RSVP tracking features.
- Account Login Page
Evite makes bringing people together easy! Send online...
- eGift Cards
How to send an eGift card in a few easy steps via Evite ...
- Fa-boo-lous New + Free Halloween Invites
Halloween might be scary, but planning your party doesn’t...
- Birthday Party Invitations
Browse Evite's collection of birthday party invitations!...
- Upload Your Own Design Invitations
The first step to creating a one-of-a-kind Evite invitation...
- Profile
Evite makes bringing people together easy! Send online...
- Kids' Birthday
Evite has a large collection of kids' birthday invitations...
- Online Invitations, Greeting Cards & Party Ideas
Evite® and Life's Better Together ™ are trademarks of Evite,...
- Account Login Page
Evite is an archaic word for avoid, meaning to keep out of the way of or to refrain from doing something. Learn more about its pronunciation, synonyms, grammar and word origin from Collins English Dictionary.
Evite definition: to avoid; shun.. See examples of EVITE used in a sentence.
Evite is a transitive verb that means to avoid or shun something or someone. It is an archaic word from Middle French or Latin and is only found in the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary.
Evite is a verb that means to avoid or keep away from something. It is an old-fashioned word that is not commonly used in modern English. Learn more about its pronunciation, synonyms and usage examples.
Evited is the past tense and past participle of evite, a verb meaning to invite or summon. Find similar words to evited using the buttons below or unscramble evited to form other words.
evite ( third-person singular simple present evites, present participle eviting, simple past and past participle evited) ( now, rare, chiefly, Scotland) To avoid. 1678, Robert Barclay, An Apology for the True Christian Divinity, The way which our adversaries take to evite this testimony, is most foolish and ridiculous: […] 1824, James Hogg ...