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Rank | Letters | Answer | Clue | |
1 | 99% | 3 | Exact Match! | |
2 | 49% | 11 | A fricative or sibilant consonant that begins with a stop closure and releases into the fricative element. | |
3 | 35% | 6 | Kingdom during the Anglo-Saxon period | |
Anglo Saxon Fricative Crossword Clue
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Best Possible Answers
About This Clues Answer
We think the answer is "EDH" which means:
- noun
- • A letter (capital ð, small ð) introduced into old english to represent its dental fricative, then not distinguished from the letter thorn, no longer used in english but still in modern use in icelandic, the ipa and other phonetic alphabets to represent the voiced dental fricative "th" sound as in the english word then. the letter is also used in faroese, but is generally silent in that language.
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Clue Last Found In...
Source | #Number | Answer |
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New York Times10 Apr 1988 | Down 138 | |
This clue was last seen in the publications above.
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Similar Clues
Clue | Source | |
---|---|---|
1 | A fricative or sibilant consonant that begins with a stop closure and releases into the fricative element. | |
2 | Anglo-Saxon domestic
New York Times -
23 Sep 1976 | New York Times / 23 Sep 1976 |
3 | Anglo-Saxon king of Wessex from 865 to 871 | |
4 | Anglo-Saxon poet
New York Times -
23 Jun 1990 | New York Times / 23 Jun 1990 |
5 | Fricative
New York Times -
03 Jan 1986 | New York Times / 03 Jan 1986 |
6 | Old English fricative
New York Times -
12 Jul 1986 | New York Times / 12 Jul 1986 |
7 | Usual pattern followed by an Anglo-Saxon conqueror
The Guardian Cryptic -
11 Aug 2003 | The Guardian Cryptic / 11 Aug 2003 |