Opening line
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 30 answers to crossword clue "Opening line"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
HIYAOpening line
ABCDEOpening line?
DEARESTLover's opening line
PLAYBALLAn opening line
ORSHOULDISAYOpening line, continued
IMOView opening, on-line
MAYIHELPYOUBank teller's opening line
TRAOpening for a chorus line
ILIADIts opening line mentions Peleus
SHEONCEHADMEEnd of the opening line
ITSMEOpening line from someone phoning home
INTROSong part before the opening line
ARMA"... virumque cano" (opening line of "The Aeneid")
GALT"Who is John ...?" (opening line of "Atlas Shrugged")
AMERICA"I believe in ..." (opening line of "The Godfather")
OHTOBEINENGLANDBrowning opening line preceding "Now that April's there"
LIVEFROMNEWYORKClassic opening line from an NBC sketch show
NORMA"Goodbye, ... Jean" (opening line of "Candle in the Wind")
OTHELLOHis opening line is "'Tis better as it is"
OUR"Now is the winter of ... discontent" (opening line of "Richard III")
OBERONShakespeare character whose opening line is "Ill met by moonlight, proud Titania"
HELLOIMMISTEREDOpening line from a TV show that debuted on 1-5-61
HELLOGORGEOUSStreisand's opening line in "Funny Girl," which she repeated to her Oscar statuette
fissuresA long, narrow opening or line of breakage made by cracking or splitting, esp. in rock or earth
sidingsA short track at the side of and opening onto a railroad line, used chiefly for shunting or stabling trains
balladeA poem normally composed of three stanzas and an envoi. The last line of the opening stanza is used as a refrain, and the same rhymes, strictly limited in number, recur throughout
rondeaua fixed form of verse based on two rhyme sounds and consisting usually of 13 lines in three stanzas with the opening words of the first line of the first stanza used as an independent refrain after the second and third stanzas
rondeauxa fixed form of verse based on two rhyme sounds and consisting usually of 13 lines in three stanzas with the opening words of the first line of the first stanza used as an independent refrain after the second and third stanzas
villanelleA nineteen-line poem with two rhymes throughout, consisting of five tercets and a quatrain, with the first and third lines of the opening tercet recurring alternately at the end of the other tercets and with both repeated at the close of the concluding quatrain
villanellesA nineteen-line poem with two rhymes throughout, consisting of five tercets and a quatrain, with the first and third lines of the opening tercet recurring alternately at the end of the other tercets and with both repeated at the close of the concluding quatrain