"... dish ran away with the ___" | 42 |
Word with tea or soup | 21 |
Word after table or tea | 23 |
Wobbly fishing lure | 19 |
What the dish ran away with, in "Hey Diddle Diddle" | 61 |
Three wood | 10 |
This causes quite a stir | 24 |
The dish's running mate? | 28 |
The dish ran away with it | 25 |
TCBY freebie | 12 |
Taster's aid | 16 |
Sundae-eater's need | 23 |
Sundae eater's need | 23 |
Sugar stirrer | 13 |
Stirring item | 13 |
Snuggle in bed, say | 19 |
Small whirlpool cause | 21 |
Skimming utensil | 16 |
Shiny fishing lure | 18 |
Setting part | 12 |
Scoop (up) | 10 |
Runcible ___ | 12 |
River for poet Masters | 22 |
React to a June moon | 20 |
Provider of a scoop | 19 |
Nursery-rhyme runaway | 21 |
Nursery-rhyme eloper | 20 |
Mess-kit item | 13 |
Masters' river | 18 |
Lie to one's lover? | 23 |
Ladle cousin | 12 |
Item in a stirring picture? | 27 |
It's traditionally placed to the right of the knife | 55 |
It stirs things up | 18 |
It often comes with chili | 25 |
It may produce a stir | 21 |
It may be silver or greasy | 26 |
It fled with the dish | 21 |
It can produce quite a stir | 27 |
Illinois river | 14 |
Ice cream parlor utensil | 24 |
Greasy ___ | 10 |
Eloping utensil | 15 |
Eloper with a dish | 18 |
Dish's running partner | 26 |
Dish's running mate? | 24 |
Dish's fellow elopee | 24 |
Dish's elopement partner | 28 |
Dish's companion | 20 |
Dish accompanier of rhyme | 25 |
Cuddle in bed | 13 |
Cereal-eating implement | 23 |
Cereal eater's need | 23 |
Bill and coo | 12 |
Be amorous, in a way | 20 |
Angling lure | 12 |
Alt rock Texans, inspired by cutlery? | 37 |
"Anthology" river | 27 |
Wading bird with a long, flat beak | 34 |
One may be roseate | 18 |
Long-beaked wading bird | 23 |
Ibis's kin | 14 |
Ibis' kin | 13 |
Cousin of the ibis | 18 |
Ibis relatives | 14 |
Cuddled, in a way | 17 |
Lay beside | 10 |
Ladled | 6 |
Used a utensil | 14 |
Used a ladle | 12 |
Smooched, old style | 19 |
Showed affection for, in a way | 30 |
Necked | 6 |
Ate, as soup | 12 |
Acted amorously | 15 |
Word-botching reverend | 22 |
When he botched words, he watched birds | 39 |
Sound-switching reverend | 24 |
Sound-swapping reverend | 23 |
Reverend whose name is linked to terms like "Pazz and Jop," and this puzzle's theme answers | 105 |
Reverend known for watching birds? | 34 |
Reverend honored in this puzzle | 31 |
Reverend famous for swapping sounds | 35 |
Reverend credited with saying "The Lord is a shoving leopard" | 71 |
Rev. William who originated the phrase "a blushing crow" | 66 |
Phrase-mangling reverend | 24 |
Oxford don reputed to mix words | 31 |
Noted word botcher | 18 |
Name linked to "This pie is occupewed" etc. | 53 |
Misspeaking cleric | 18 |
Memorable consonant transposer | 30 |
Legendary speech garbler | 24 |
Inadvertent creator of phrases like "well-boiled icicle" | 66 |
Famed twister of words | 22 |
Cleric famous for bloopers | 26 |
Clergyman known for slips of tongue | 35 |
Clergyman famous for slips of the tongue | 40 |
"Well-boiled icycle" man | 34 |
"Well-boiled icicles" man | 35 |
"The weight of rages will press hard upon the employer" speaker | 73 |