Question

Here you will find all Crosswords Clues.

TextLength
It may be used to find out if you have good contacts 52
It may carry the words ''Rey de Espana'' 56
It may have Braille markings, even on a drive-thru version 58
It may precede ''boy!'' or ''girl!'' 68
It may precede "Don't let anyone hear!" 53
It may precede "I didn't see you there" 53
It may precede "You're in trouble now!" 53
It may range from beach castles to Buddhist mandalas 52
It means "place without water" in Mongolian 53
It meets adjacent to Paris's Jardin du Luxembourg 53
It might be called a "two-up two-down" by a Brit 58
It might be charged by one enforcing the payment of a debt 58
It might be found, appropriately, in a newspaper morgue 55
It might be given to a waiter or a police investigator 54
It might be said when your folks go on about their sex lives 60
It might come from the lips of someone who's all thumbs 59
It might include a 10, jack, queen and king of hearts 53
It might include all nine of Beethoven's symphonies 55
It might mean "hello" or "goodbye" to a driver 66
It might put you head and shoulders above everyone else 55
It might read "Home: Who cares; Away: Whatever" 57
It might read "Lose 20 pounds in 3 weeks!!!" 54
It might say ''Maryland'' in Atlantic City 58
It might say "New Jersey" in Atlantic City 52
It might say "Who the Hell is Brendan Emmett Quigley?" 64
It occupies 25 pages in the Oxford English Dictionary 53
It occurs a little over six weeks after Groundhog Day 53
It offers radio programming in eight aboriginal languages 57
It once billed itself "The most trusted name in television" 69
It once had a "30 minutes or it's free" policy 60
It opened its first store in Winston-Salem, N.C., in 1937 57
It opens with thunder and lightning, in "Macbeth" 59
It originated at Zurich's Cabaret Voltaire in the 1910s 59
It originated from the General Call made with a boatswain's pipe 68
It precedes ''carte'' or ''mode'' 65
It precedes "fast" and follows "home" 57
It precedes "more" and "lasting" 52
It precedes "of God" or "of war" 52
It precedes any of the five circled "words" 53
It precedes the last words of the four longest puzzle answers 61
It provided tires for Lindbergh's Spirit of St. Louis 57
It recently confirmed that Voyager 1 has left the solar system 62
It reportedly took him a month to solve his own puzzle 54
It rhymes with "are" in "We Three Kings" 60
It roughly translates to "bearded" in Tibet 53
It says "WILL CROSS WORDS 4 $$" on my blog picture 60
It separates ''pay'' from ''view'' 66
It shouldn't be tried by people who aren't good at English 66
It sounds like a fruit, but it's really a jellyfish 55
It starts "Sing, goddess, the wrath of Peleus' son..." 68
It starts "Tell me, muse, of the man of many resources" 65
It starts and ends in inverno in the Northern Hemisphere 56
It starts at a plate (and a hint to this puzzle's theme) 60
It starts with "In" and ends with "Egypt" 61
It starts with thunder and lightning in "Macbeth" 59
It stays the same for astronauts, even when they lose weight 60
It stops at Manhattan's Washington Square and Rockefeller Center 68
It succeeded "Let It Be" as Billboard's #1 single 63
It suggests the vowel pattern in the five starred answers 57
It tells the tale of the survivors of Oceanic Flight 815 56
It took 358 years to prove his "last theorem" 55
It transcends sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch 52
It underwent the Enlightenment, with "the" 53
It usually begins with the Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg 61
It usually contains at least five continuous yards of fabric 60
It usually ranges from the mid-sixties to the mid-seventies 59
It was "lost" in 1981's top-grossing movie 56
It was "really lookin' fine" in a 1964 hit 56
It was "really lookin' fine" in a 1964 pop hit 60
It was "The American Tribal Love Rock Musical" 56
It was admitted as a free state as part of the Missouri Compromise 66
It was Ayn Rand's working title for "Anthem" 58
It was called a "permanent World's Fair" early on 63
It was called the "Ritz-Carlton of airlines" 54
It was destroyed by Godzilla in "Godzilla Raids Again" 64
It was domesticated in the Andes about 4,000 years ago 54
It was dubbed "The Eighth Wonder of the World" 56
It was established by the National Defense Act of 1916 (abbr.) 62
It was held outside of California only once, in 1942 52
It was known as the Blue Sea during the reign of Peter the Great 64
It was MSNBC's highest-rated program when canceled in 2003 62
It was Obama's self-professed favorite TV series 52
It was once advertised as "Good for tender gums" 58
It was once described as an "odious column of bolted metal" 69
It was originally called "Brad's Drink" 53
It was published four years before "Moby-Dick" 56
It was redesigned in 2004 for the first time in 66 years 56
It was shipwrecked in 1964 somewhere in the South Pacific 57
It was split into two parts by the 1899 Treaty of Berlin 56
It won the 2003 Tonys for Best Musical, Best Book, and Best Score 65
It works as long as you don't know it shouldn't 55
It would "make other cars seem ordinary," per ads 59
It would, at last, make the Constitution discuss sex 52
It'll "do ya," according to a Brylcreem ad 56
It's "a mass of incandescent gas," in a TMBG song 63
It's "architecture, not interior decoration": Hemingway 69
It's "ascending" in a Vaughan Williams piece 58
It's "bustin' out all over," in song 54
It's "falling down" in a children's song 58
It's "For the Real Meat Lover in the Family!" 59