Saws and laws have them
Crossword Clue

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AnswerCrossword Clue
TEETHSaws and laws have them
TEETHWhat saws and laws have.
NATURESGOD"... to which the Laws of ... ... entitle them ..." (mixing church and state!)
paradigmphilosophical and theoretical framework of a scientific school or discipline within which theories, laws, and generalizations and the experiments performed in support of them are formulated
TEETHGears and gums have them
TEETHGears and combs have them
MITTSCatchers and chefs have them
ENDINGSNerves and novels have them
CAPESBatman and Superman have them
MOODSPeople and verbs have them
LEGSTables and triangles have them
DOTSi's and j's have them
MOODSVerbs and people have them
EARSPitchers and walls have them
RACESDaytona and Indianapolis have them
BRANDSRanches and corporations have them
PENNANTSThe Yanks and Dodgers have them.
DELTASThe Mekong and Nile have them
BILLSDucks and most people have them
TRAGICENDINGS"King Lear" and "Othello" have them
ADSBuses and taxis have them nowadays
AROMASCoffee and fresh-baked cookies have them
LISTSDavid Letterman and Santa Claus have them
OMEGASJames Bond and JFK have worn them
GAPSDavid Letterman and Alfred E. Neuman have them
HATBOXESThey have lids on them...and in them
TASTETESTSCoke and Pepsi have had many of them
JDSBoth Barack and Michelle Obama have them: Abbr.
holdkeep back from use ask them to hold a room for us I'll have a hot dog, and hold the mustard
constructivismA view which admits as valid only constructive proofs and entities demonstrable by them, implying that the latter have no independent existence
piddocksA bivalve mollusk that bores into soft rock or other firm surfaces. The valves of the shell have a conspicuous gap between them and rough frontal ridges to aid in boring
essentialismA belief that things have a set of characteristics that make them what they are, and that the task of science and philosophy is their discovery and expression; the doctrine that essence is prior to existence
genders(in languages such as Latin, Greek, Russian, and German) Each of the classes (typically masculine, feminine, common, neuter) of nouns and pronouns distinguished by the different inflections that they have and require in words syntactically associated with them. Grammatical gender is only very loosely associated with natural distinctions of sex