They are not rugged individualists
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 25 answers to crossword clue "They are not rugged individualists"
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AnswerCrossword Clue
STATESOCIALISTSThey are not "rugged individualists."
ITTAKESAVILLAGEBest seller that begins "Children are not rugged individualists"
SINSAngelic they are not
NOSThey are not positive
ACESThey are not returned properly
OVALSThey are not quite circles
ANDSThey are not ifs or buts
SEEM"Things are not always what they ..."
IONSThey are not free of charge
MYTHSThey are not to be taken seriously
WOT" . . . walk and ... not that they are": Shak.
FAKESThings that are not what they seem.
ETSThose who are not among us (or are they?)
IDEAS"... are like beards; men do not have them until they grow up": Voltaire
undecidedsA person who has not decided how they are going to vote in an election
CYNICOne "whose faulty vision sees things as they are, not as they ought to be": Bierce
benchesA seat on which sports coaches and players sit during a game when they are not playing
staggeringArrange (objects or parts of an object) in a zigzag order or so that they are not in line
staggeredArrange (objects or parts of an object) in a zigzag order or so that they are not in line
cowshedsA farm building in which cattle are kept when not in a pasture, or in which they are milked
interlopersA person who becomes involved in a place or situation where they are not wanted or are considered not to belong
interloperA person who becomes involved in a place or situation where they are not wanted or are considered not to belong
demurrerspleading in effect that even if the facts are as alleged by the opposite party, they do not sustain the contention based on them
positivismsThe theory that laws are to be understood as social rules, valid because they are enacted by authority or derive logically from existing decisions, and that ideal or moral considerations (e.g., that a rule is unjust) should not limit the scope or operation of the law
positivismThe theory that laws are to be understood as social rules, valid because they are enacted by authority or derive logically from existing decisions, and that ideal or moral considerations (e.g., that a rule is unjust) should not limit the scope or operation of the law