Gem of the Mountains
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 39 answers to crossword clue "Gem of the Mountains"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
IDAHO"Gem of the mountains"
IDAHOGem of the Mountains.
IDAHOGem of the Mountains
SILVERSTATENeighbor of the Gem of the Mountains
OCEAN" . . . the gem of the ..."
SPACESHUTTLE"Gem of the ocean"
PEARLGem of the ocean
EMERALDISLEGem of the North Atlantic
LARAMIE"Gem City of the Plains"
OCEANWhat Columbia's the gem of.
OPALGem of the quartz family.
LARAMIEGem City of the Plains
BOISEIDCap. of the Gem State
BOISECapital of the Gem State
COLUMBIAThe gem of the ocean
OPALGem of the oldest continent
dactyliographythe study of gem engraving
OCEANOf which Columbia is the gem.
CAMEOCarved gem of the jabot days.
ESTOStart of the Gem State's motto
EDELWEISSGem from "The Sound of Music"
SOFTGSound at the beginning of 'gem'
IDAHOANA resident of the "Gem State"
IDAHOBRACELETPiece of jewelry in the Gem State?
ERINJoyce's "Green Gem of the Silver Sea"
USAMonogram for Columbia, the gem of the ocean.
FACETPOWDERDusting on the side of a cut gem?
facetone of the surfaces of a cut gem
facetsone of the surfaces of a cut gem
culetssmall face forming the bottom of a faceted gem
culetsmall face forming the bottom of a faceted gem
crownsThe upper part of a cut gem, above the girdle
pearlhard, smooth, near-white gem formed within the shell of an oyster
playsisk, fitful, or light movement the gem presented a dazzling play of colors
HOPEDIAMOND45 1-2-carat gem at the National Museum of Natural History [Rhode Island]
andraditeA mineral of the garnet group, containing calcium and iron. It occurs as yellow, green, brown, or black crystals, sometimes of gem quality
toadstoneA gem, fossil tooth, or other stone formerly supposed to have been formed in the body of a toad, and credited with therapeutic or protective properties
toadstonesA gem, fossil tooth, or other stone formerly supposed to have been formed in the body of a toad, and credited with therapeutic or protective properties
pearlsA hard, lustrous spherical mass, typically white or bluish-gray, formed within the shell of a pearl oyster or other bivalve mollusk and highly prized as a gem