Fully in a way
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 18 answers to crossword clue "Fully in a way"
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AnswerCrossword Clue
FLOORTOCEILINGFully, in a way
deepestFully absorbed or involved in (a state or activity)
readiestIn a suitable state for an activity, action, or situation; fully prepared
paralegalsA person trained in subsidiary legal matters but not fully qualified as a lawyer
sneaking(of a feeling) Persistent in one's mind but reluctantly held or not fully recognized; nagging
crowning(of a baby's head during labor) Fully appear in the vaginal opening prior to emerging
gerontomorphicof, pertaining to, or designating anatomical specialization most fully represented in the mature male of a species
followto carry out fully, as a stroke of a club in golf, a racket in tennis, etc.
bundlingSleep fully clothed with another person, particularly during courtship, as a former local custom in New England and Wales
stronger(of an acid or base) Fully ionized into cations and anions in solution; having (respectively) a very low or a very high pH
borderlinebeing in an intermediate position or state not fully classifiable as one thing or its opposite a borderline state between waking and sleeping
strongest(of an acid or base) Fully ionized into cations and anions in solution; having (respectively) a very low or a very high pH
venerable(in the Roman Catholic Church) A title given to a deceased person who has attained a certain degree of sanctity but has not been fully beatified or canonized
fontanellesA space between the bones of the skull in an infant or fetus, where ossification is not complete and the sutures not fully formed. The main one is between the frontal and parietal bones
fontanelsA space between the bones of the skull in an infant or fetus, where ossification is not complete and the sutures not fully formed. The main one is between the frontal and parietal bones
desmodromicdenoting a system, used in some motorcycle and racing car engines, that employs eg cams, rockers, etc to ensure that the opening and closing of valves, when the vehicle is at high speed, is fully controlled
towersa building or structure typically higher than its diameter and high relative to its surroundings that may stand apart (as a campanile) or be attached (as a church belfry) to a larger structure and that may be fully walled in or of skeleton framework (as an observation or transmission tower)
serialismA compositional technique in which a fixed series of notes, esp. the twelve notes of the chromatic scale, are used to generate the harmonic and melodic basis of a piece and are subject to change only in specific ways. The first fully serial movements appeared in 1923 in works by Arnold Schoenberg