He lost to Ike
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 38 answers to crossword clue "He lost to Ike"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
ADLAIHe lost to Ike
ADLAIStevenson who lost to Ike
ADLAIHe finished second to Ike
HUBERTHe lost to Dick
DOLEHe lost to Clinton
ADLAIHe lost to Dwight
HHHHe lost to RMN
PEROTHe lost to Clinton
AESHe lost to DDE
BAERHe lost to Louis, 1935.
GREELEYHe lost to Grant, 1872.
ADLAIHe lost to Dwight twice
AESHe lost twice to DDE
ADLAIHe lost twice to Dwight
ANATOLYHe lost to Garry in 1985
ALFHe lost to Franklin in 1936
AESHe lost to D.D.E.
RIGGSHe lost to King in '73
AJAXHe lost Achilles's armor to Odysseus
DOLEHe lost to Clinton in 1996
AESHe lost twice to D.D.E.
MILOSEVICHe appears to have lost to Kostunica
DICKSAVITTHe lost to Seixas on the courts.
HAYESHe lost the popular vote to Tilden
COENHe lost to Minghella for Best Director of 1996
ILIEHe lost to Bjorn in the 1976 Wimbledon final
RAYBOOMBOOMMANCINIHe lost a 1989 fight to Hector "Macho" Camacho
REAHe lost out to Pacino for Best Actor of 1992
CARYHe lost out to Bing for Best Actor of 1944
DONCHEADLEHe lost out to Jamie Foxx for Best Actor of 2004
JOAQUINPHOENIXHe lost out to Philip Seymour Hoffman for Best Actor of 2005
LEONEHe lost out to Forman for the 1984 Best Director Golden Globe
IVANHe lost to Boris in the finals of the 1991 Australian Open
ALDAHe lost out to Morgan Freeman for the 2004 Best Supporting Actor Oscar
dimeterverse or line of two measures or feet, as He is gone on the mountain,/He is lost to the forest
bamsa sudden loud noise often used interjectionally to indicate a sudden impact or occurrence was fine, then bam, he lost his job
syllepsis(Greek) a construction in which a word governs two or more other words but agrees in number, gender, or case with only one, or has a different meaning when applied to each of the words, as in 'He lost his coat and his temper'
syllepsesSYLLEPSIS, (Greek) a construction in which a word governs two or more other words but agrees in number, gender, or case with only one, or has a different meaning when applied to each of the words, as in 'He lost his coat and his temper'