Words between man and mouse
Crossword Clue

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AnswerCrossword Clue
ORAWords between man and mouse
ORAWords between "man" and "mouse"
ORAMan-mouse go-between
ORAMan-mouse words
DRRUTHAdviser once described as "a cross between Henry Kissinger and Minnie Mouse"
ALAWords between "chicken" and "king"
GOODTURNDESERVESWords between one and another
ALAWords between pie and mode
IREPEATWords between "not" and "not"
ORNOTTOWords between be and be
ITAWords between "call" and "day"
ITINWords between "put" and "writing"
WHATELSEWords between "so" and "is new"
EARLOFWords between John Montagu and Sandwich
CARETOWords between "Would you" and "dance"
ATAWords between "one day" and "time"
ORNOTShakespearean words between "to be" and "to be"
onomasiologythe branch of semantics concerned with the meanings of and meaning relations between individual words
onomasiologiesONOMASIOLOGY, the branch of semantics concerned with the meanings of and meaning relations between individual words
copulaeword or set of words that acts as a connecting link between the subject and predicate of a proposition
copulasword or set of words that acts as a connecting link between the subject and predicate of a proposition
copulaword or set of words that acts as a connecting link between the subject and predicate of a proposition
copularword or set of words that acts as a connecting link between the subject and predicate of a proposition
basicswidely adopted programming language that uses English words, punctuation marks, and algebraic notation to facilitate communication between the operator or lay user and the computer
basicwidely adopted programming language that uses English words, punctuation marks, and algebraic notation to facilitate communication between the operator or lay user and the computer
linkingDenoting a consonant that is sounded at a boundary between two words or morphemes where two vowels would otherwise be adjacent, as in law(r) and order
appositionA relationship between two or more words or phrases in which the two units are grammatically parallel and have the same referent (e.g., my friend Sue; the first U.S. President, George Washington
appositionsA relationship between two or more words or phrases in which the two units are grammatically parallel and have the same referent (e.g., my friend Sue; the first U.S. President, George Washington
ironycongruity between a situation developed in a drama and the accompanying words or actions that is understood by the audience but not by the characters in the play called also dramatic irony tragic irony
virgulea short oblique stroke (/) between two words indicating that whichever is appropriate may be chosen to complete the sense of the text in which they occur: The defendant and his/her attorney must appear in court