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Expand? | Letters | Answer | Clue | |||||
99% | 4 | Exact Match! | ||||||
verb • To possess, own. • To hold, as something at someone's disposal. • Used to state the existence or presence of someone in a specified relationship with the subject. • To partake of (a particular substance, especially food or drink, or action or activity). • To be scheduled to attend, undertake or participate in. • To experience, go through, undergo. • To be afflicted with, suffer from. • (auxiliary verb, taking a past participle) Used in forming the perfect aspect. • Used as an interrogative verb before a pronoun to form a tag question, echoing a previous use of 'have' as an auxiliary verb or, in certain cases, main verb. (For further discussion, see the appendix English tag questions.) • (auxiliary verb, taking a to-infinitive) See have to. • To give birth to. • To engage in sexual intercourse with. • To accept as a romantic partner. • (transitive with bare infinitive) To cause to, by a command, request or invitation. • (transitive with adjective or adjective-phrase complement) To cause to be. • (transitive with bare infinitive) To be affected by an occurrence. (Used in supplying a topic that is not a verb argument.) • (transitive with adjective or adjective-phrase complement) To depict as being. • To defeat in a fight; take. • (obsolete outside Ireland) To be able to speak (a language). • To feel or be (especially painfully) aware of. • To trick, to deceive. • (often with present participle) To allow; to tolerate. • (often used in the negative) To believe, buy, be taken in by. • To host someone; to take in as a guest. • To get a reading, measurement, or result from an instrument or calculation. • (of a jury) To consider a court proceeding that has been completed; to begin deliberations on a case. • To make an observation of (a bird species). | ||||||||
45% | 6 | Italian city where Romeo is banished in Shakespeare's 'Romeo and Juliet' | ||||||
noun • loose gown of the 17th and 18th centuries | ||||||||
45% | 5 | One who sings the role of Romeo in 'Romeo and Juliet' | ||||||
noun • the adult male singing voice above baritone • the pitch range of the highest male voice • an adult male with a tenor voice • a settled or prevailing or habitual course of a person's life • the general meaning or substance of an utterance adjective satellite • (of a musical instrument) intermediate between alto and baritone or bass • of or close in range to the highest natural adult male voice | ||||||||
She ___ Dians Wit Romeo Crossword Clue
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Source | #Number | Answer |
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New York Times11 Feb 2011 | Across 23 | |
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Similar Clues
Clue | Source | |
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1 | "O Romeo, Romeo!" crier
New York Times -
25 Oct 2016 | New York Times / 25 Oct 2016 |
2 | He appeared in the film Romeo and Juliet as Romeo's friend | |
3 | Italian city where Romeo is banished in Shakespeare's 'Romeo and Juliet' | |
4 | Mercutio and Roméo, in Gounod's "Roméo et Juliette"
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17 Feb 2005 | New York Times / 17 Feb 2005 |
5 | The "she" in the lyric "I'm not the world's most physical guy, / But when she squeezed me tight she nearly broke my spine"
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21 Sep 2015 | New York Times / 21 Sep 2015 |
6 | The "she" in the lyric "She walked up to me and she asked me to dance"
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23 Aug 2011 | New York Times / 23 Aug 2011 |
7 | When to hear "O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?"
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12 Nov 2005 | New York Times / 12 Nov 2005 |