Coarse as stucco
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 40 answers to crossword clue "Coarse as stucco"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
ROUGHCASTCoarse, as stucco
RIBALDCoarse, as humor
EARTHYCoarse, as talk
STREETCoarse, as language
EARTHYCoarse, as humor
SALTYCoarse, as language
VULGARCoarse, as language
FINERNot as coarse
BARNYARDCoarse, as language
EARTHYCoarse, as language
SALTYCoarse, as a joke
SALTIESTMost coarse, as humor
sackingcoarse fabric (as burlap)
RAWCoarse, as a comic
TIMOTHYCoarse grass used as fodder
EARTHYCoarse, as a sense of humor
TAPALOCoarse cloth worn as scarf : Sp. Amer.
stovercoarse roughage used as feed for livestock
psephiteany coarse rock, as breccia or conglomerate
stoverscoarse roughage used as feed for livestock
seawareseaweed, esp. coarse, large seaweed, used chiefly as a fertilizer
timothycoarse grass, Phleum pratense, having cylindrical spikes, used as fodder
gunnysacka sack made of a coarse heavy material, such as burlap
gunnysacksGUNNYSACK, a sack made of a coarse heavy material, such as burlap
bluestemsA coarse North American prairie grass with bluish leaf sheaths, often cultivated as forage
screenerpass (as coal, gravel, or ashes) through a screen to separate the fine part from the coarse
kibbleto grind or divide into particles or pellets, as coarse-ground meal or prepared dry dog food
gravelA mixture of such stones with coarse sand, used for paths and roads and as an aggregate
syenitesA coarse-grained gray igneous rock composed mainly of alkali feldspar and ferromagnesian minerals such as hornblende
protopathicpertaining to reception by nerves, etc. of only coarse stimuli such as heat, pain, etc.; pertaining to such nerves
dulseany of several coarse red seaweeds (especially Palmaria palmata) found especially in northern latitudes and used as a food condiment
tabardsA coarse garment of this kind as the outer dress of medieval peasants and clerics, or worn as a surcoat over armor
doupioniirregular silk thread reeled from two or more entangled cocoons and producing a coarse yarn generally used in fabrics such as shantung or pongee
dupionirregular silk thread reeled from two or more entangled cocoons and producing a coarse yarn generally used in fabrics such as shantung or pongee
dupionsirregular silk thread reeled from two or more entangled cocoons and producing a coarse yarn generally used in fabrics such as shantung or pongee
protopathicRelating to or denoting those sensory nerve fibers of the skin that are capable of discriminating only among such relatively coarse stimuli as heat, cold, and pain
canvasesA strong, coarse unbleached cloth made from hemp, flax, cotton, or a similar yarn, used to make items such as sails and tents and as a surface for oil painting
canvassesA strong, coarse unbleached cloth made from hemp, flax, cotton, or a similar yarn, used to make items such as sails and tents and as a surface for oil painting
comfreysany coarse Eurasian plant belonging to the genus Symphytum, of the borage family, as the widely cultivated S. officinale, having hairy, lance-shaped leaves and drooping clusters of small, white, rose-colored, or purplish flowers
comfreyany coarse Eurasian plant belonging to the genus Symphytum, of the borage family, as the widely cultivated S. officinale, having hairy, lance-shaped leaves and drooping clusters of small, white, rose-colored, or purplish flowers