Form of writing old style
Crossword Clue

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AnswerCrossword Clue
POESYForm of writing, old style.
UNCIALWriting style of old Latin manuscripts
SLATESWriting tablets, old style.
EMBOWForm into an arch, old-style
FREEVERSEStyle of writing.
PROSEStyle of writing
KANJIStyle of Japanese writing
unciala style of writing
dictionstyle of speaking or writing
uncialsUNCIAL, a style of writing
DADAWriting style of the early 1900s
handwritingA person's particular style of writing
PROSEANDKHANSBook about the writing style of the Mongols?
bookish(of language or writing) Literary in style or allusion
aureatecharacterized by an ornate style of writing or speaking.
dictionchoice or style of words in speech or writing.
aureatecharacterized by an ornate style of writing or speaking
journaleseA hackneyed style of writing supposedly characteristic of newspapers and magazines
languagesThe manner or style of a piece of writing or speech
euphuistany similar ornate style of writing or speaking; high-flown, periphrastic language
euphuismany similar ornate style of writing or speaking; high-flown, periphrastic language
euphuistsany similar ornate style of writing or speaking; high-flown, periphrastic language
floweriest(of a style of speech or writing) Full of elaborate or literary words and phrases
discursive(of a style of speech or writing) Fluent and expansive rather than formulaic or abbreviated
flowerier(of a style of speech or writing) Full of elaborate or literary words and phrases
bureaucratesesA style of speech or writing characterized by jargon, euphemism, and abstractions, held to be typical of bureaucrats
bureaucrateseA style of speech or writing characterized by jargon, euphemism, and abstractions, held to be typical of bureaucrats
gongoristicrelating to Gongorism, a florid, inverted and pedantic style of writing, introduced by the Spanish poet Luis de Góngora y Argote
officialeseThe formal and typically verbose style of writing considered to be characteristic of official documents, esp. when it is difficult to understand
newspeakan official or semiofficial style of writing or saying one thing in the guise of its opposite, especially in order to serve a political or ideological cause while pretending to be objective.