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Expand? | Letters | Answer | Clue | |||||
99% | 8 | Exact Match! | ||||||
noun • a submarine that is propelled by nuclear power • cephalopod mollusk of warm seas whose females have delicate papery spiral shells • cephalopod of the Indian and Pacific oceans having a spiral shell with pale pearly partitions | ||||||||
33% | 8 | A sub-style or sub-category unique within a genre | ||||||
noun • One of several categories within a particular genre. | ||||||||
31% | 10 | Often involves creating sub-lists or sub-tasks | ||||||
noun • based on the principle of proportional representation; voters choose between party lists, the number elected from each list being determined by the percentage cast for each list out of the total vote | ||||||||
Insult Divers Find Acceptable To The French Sub Crossword Clue
There is 1 exact and 153 possible answers.
We've checked our database and believe the answer is
NAUTILUS which was last seen in the The Guardian Cryptic crossword.
Check other possible answers below.
Check other possible answers below.
We think the answer to this crossword clue is:
NAUTILUS
Updated: October 14, 2023
Best Possible Answers
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We think you're currently doing a The Guardian Cryptic crossword, and other users also searched for these clues:
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Clue Last Found In...
Source | #Number | Answer |
---|---|---|
The Guardian Cryptic01 Feb 2008 | Down 18 | |
This clue was last seen in the publications above.
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Similar Clues
Clue | Source | |
---|---|---|
1 | Commonly affects scuba divers and commercial divers | |
2 | Divers' gear
New York Times -
25 May 1984 | New York Times / 25 May 1984 |
3 | H<sub>2</sub>O sources
New York Times -
09 Dec 1984 | New York Times / 09 Dec 1984 |
4 | Insult about a French port?
The Guardian Everyman -
25 May 2014 | The Guardian Everyman / 25 May 2014 |
5 | Offer divers find generous
The Guardian Cryptic -
25 Jan 2017 | The Guardian Cryptic / 25 Jan 2017 |
6 | Often involves creating sub-lists or sub-tasks | |
7 | Sub-sub-players
New York Times -
08 May 2011 | New York Times / 08 May 2011 |
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From the Greek for “sailor”, a marine mollusc whose name originally referred to the floating argonaut octopus, wrongly believed by Aristotle to use its tentacles as sails