Clue | Answer |
---|---|
1967 film about partners in crime | View Answer |
(Latin) What good would that do me? | View Answer |
A malefactor who atones for making your writing nonsense by permitting the compositor to make it unintelligible | View Answer |
A person who talks when you wish him to listen | View Answer |
A place of retirement for women who wish for leisure to meditate upon the vice of idleness | View Answer |
A shackle for the free | View Answer |
A tall vegetable intended by nature to serve as a penal apparatus | View Answer |
A woman with a fine prospect of happiness behind her | View Answer |
Belonging to me if I can hold it or seize it | View Answer |
Desire and expectation rolled into one | View Answer |
The man who proclaims with a hammer that he has picked a pocket with his tongue | View Answer |
The patriotic art of lying for one’s country | View Answer |
To dine | View Answer |
To lie about another. To tell the truth about another | View Answer |
Unable to leave | View Answer |
A blackwater tributary joining the Amazon at Manaus | View Answer |
A cake and (in translation) a viceroy of India were named after this German town | View Answer |
A child aged about 12 | View Answer |
A communications innovation first used in the UK in Norwich (1959) and Croydon | View Answer |
A wide-mouthed pitcher | View Answer |
About four months pregnant | View Answer |
Area of land with multiple buildings built for the same purpose | View Answer |
Bad handwriting or spelling, as any fule kno | View Answer |
Captured by means of force | View Answer |
Clues in italics are from this 1911 book by American satirist Ambrose Bierce | View Answer |
Cooker component in black, white and red | View Answer |
Cream cheese used in making tiramisu | View Answer |
Device for retarding a vehicle’s motion | View Answer |
Distance(s) most often used in connection with golf and American football | View Answer |
Drawing attention to something to gain advantage | View Answer |
Edson Arantes do Nascimento | View Answer |
Extravagant | View Answer |
Girl from the ____ is a Bob Dylan song influenced by Scarborough Fair | View Answer |
Google ____ is a video chat mobile app | View Answer |
Howard ____ was the first person to referee the Champions League and World Cup finals in the same year | View Answer |
Informally in the US, to discuss in detail or at length | View Answer |
James ____ was primary editor of the Oxford English Dictionary from 1879 to 1915 | View Answer |
Jeanne Moreau and Paulette Goddard have played Célestine in film versions of this 1900 novel by Octave Mirbeau | View Answer |
Livid | View Answer |
Long-haired toy dog breed | View Answer |
Phenomenon discovered in 1827 by observation of pollen grains in water | View Answer |
Relating to claimed events without scientific explanation | View Answer |
Robert Peel’s Tamworth ____ of 1834 promised a review of civil and ecclesiastical institutions | View Answer |
Something serial used by Bach, Beethoven and Brahms, but not Satie, Scarlatti and Sibelius | View Answer |
Something used to enhance the fit or comfort of a shoe | View Answer |
Sunday Times journalist with strong views | View Answer |
The 51D flows through ____ just before it reaches the sea | View Answer |
The river Lucy Honeychurch wanted to see from her room at the Pension Bertolini | View Answer |
The skill of Bradman and Hutton | View Answer |
The summit of Mount ____ is the highest point in the Malay archipelago | View Answer |
The “____ shark” is a roof sculpture in an Oxford suburb | View Answer |
To be 5D, in informal American usage | View Answer |
To represent (someone) | View Answer |
To ____ the wash is to be revealed at last or turn out well | View Answer |
Today, in Germany | View Answer |
Unbleached linen or its colour | View Answer |
With affection for the past | View Answer |
____ was a 2001-4 Radio 4 sitcom about a hormonal wife | View Answer |
____’s picture of the wedding at Cana is the largest painting on canvas in the Louvre | View Answer |
“When it is ____, ye say, It will be fair weather: for the sky is red” (St Matthew) | View Answer |
The crossword solver is simple to use. Enter the clue from your crossword in the first input box above. Then in the pattern box let us know how many letters the answer should be. You don't have to use this box but it helps tremendously in cutting out potential incorrect solutions. If you know the answer is 5 letters and starts with a T, you can enter 5 OR T???? OR T4, which will all work. T???? and T4 are more descriptive since it lets us know that T is the first lettes.
After using, please let us know if you were able to find the correct answer!
Hope you enjoy using what we feel is the best crossword solver out there. We love monkeys, and know that their intelligence is through the roof. Primates tend to have the largest brains, hence our website name.
The best tip we can give you is to use the PATTERN feature! This will help narrow down your results in a very effective way. Just make sure to carefully enter the pattern because if it is incorrect, you will not see your correct solution in the answer list.
Whether you are completing a difficult newspaper crossword or online challenge, we should be able to assist. We are including cryptic crosswords as well as we see their growth in popularity. Have a look around and do let us know if we are missing any popular crossword publications, or specific crossword clues. We do update frequently, but of course occasionally miss some potential answers. Happy puzzling!
Use our crossword solver above to help complete your crossword grid! Solving a crossword puzzle can be difficult, especially those tricky puzzles that appear later in the week. But the Crossword Monkey is here to help! Through rigorous compilation, we have gathered and documented tons of answers from the New York Times, USA Today, Buzzfeed, and many more publications. We have a database of over a million clues that you can search from.
Here's how it works: Simply enter in the crossword clue in the first box. Example ("Fruit type"). In the second box enter in the PATTERN of letters in your puzzle. Use "?" for unknown letters. Example ("b???n?" Meaning you already know the letters of two squares of a 7 letter word. Now click on Solve! Viola! you can see the answers given to known crossword clues. You can also enter "b3n1" with the numbers indicating how many unknown letters in place. Other scenarios: If you know none of the letters in the answer, but know its a 4 letter word, you would enter "????" and then click solve. Note it may take longer to solve your clue if you know 0 letters in the word. For fill in the blank clues you can ignore the blank and continue with a space in the clue. For clues that reference another clue number such as 13 across, you can enter that in but will be helpful to have a pattern with more letters for more accurate results.
Play Crossword puzzles from USA Today
Play Crossword puzzles from NY times
Play Crossword puzzles from The Guardian
Play Crossword puzzles from The Mirror