It just came to me!
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 26 answers to crossword clue "It just came to me!"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
AHA"It just came to me!"
MARSOpportunity came to it
BIRNAMWOODIt came to Dunsinane.
infinitivesThe basic form of a verb, without an inflection binding it to a particular subject or tense (e.g., see in we came to see, let him see)
infinitiveThe basic form of a verb, without an inflection binding it to a particular subject or tense (e.g., see in we came to see, let him see)
SLOGAN"Just do it," to Nike
IDEAIt might just come to you
POOLTo use it, just add water
IDEAIt could just come to mind
AMIND"Hev it just as you've ... to . . . " : Kipling
BARSometimes you just have to raise it
STONEYou might just want to skip it
PRAYMC Hammer "We got to ... just to make it today"
GETTINGOLDERIt "is no problem. You just have to live long enough": Groucho Marx
PSYCHOLOGISTSQ: See title A: "Just one, but it has to really WANT to change"
DEATH"I'm not afraid of ..; I just don't want to be there when it happens": Woody Allen
EMO"Some mornings it just doesn't seem worth it to gnaw through the leather straps" comedian Philips
WOODYALLENWho wrote "It's not that I'm afraid to die, I just don't want to be there when it happens"
soundedmake or convey an impression especially when heard it sounds good to me you sound just like your mother
bulletsA small solid circle printed just before a line of type, such as an item in a list, to emphasize it
BENANDJERRY"And Republicans may be angry, like Sen. Campbell and President Ford, but ... will just have to get used to it: I'm an Independent!"
cognovitacknowledgment or confession by a defendant that the plaintiff's cause, or part of it, is just, wherefore the defendant, to save expense, permits judgment to be entered without trial
bracketedEnclose (a complex expression) in brackets to denote that the whole of the expression rather than just a part of it has a particular relation, such as multiplication or division, to another expression
bracketingEnclose (a complex expression) in brackets to denote that the whole of the expression rather than just a part of it has a particular relation, such as multiplication or division, to another expression
thankedto express gratitude to thanked her for the present used in the phrase thank you usually without a subject to politely express gratitude thank you for your consideration or sometimes to emphasize a preceding statement especially by implying that it is not subject to question likes her job just fine, thank you used in such phrases as thank God, thank goodness usually without a subject to express gratitude or more often only the speaker's or writer's pleasure or satisfaction in something
thankerto express gratitude to thanked her for the present used in the phrase thank you usually without a subject to politely express gratitude thank you for your consideration or sometimes to emphasize a preceding statement especially by implying that it is not subject to question likes her job just fine, thank you used in such phrases as thank God, thank goodness usually without a subject to express gratitude or more often only the speaker's or writer's pleasure or satisfaction in something