Question

Here you will find all Crosswords Clues.

TextLength
Intuitively reasonable but rarely actually used name for an online publication 78
Invention a British parliamentarian claimed in 1903 would not lead to a decline in riding horses 96
Invention by tailor Franz Reichelt in which he fell to his death (as seen on YouTube) 85
Invention modernized by William Bullock that mangled his leg and led to his death 81
Inventor and electricity pioneer (the coil named for him is twisted up in four answers) 87
Inventor and oft-cited eponym for a phrase meaning "the genuine article" 82
Inventor whose name is spelled out by the horizontal lines of special characters in this puzzle 95
Inviting danger ... the end of which can precede each half of the answer to each asterisked clue 96
Invoice for loofahs with "No-Spin Zone" printed on the handle? 72
Iowa city where Grant Wood's "American Gothic" house is located 77
Irish writer who said "Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much" 90
Irish-born actor whose character in "Barbarella" inspired the band name Duran Duran 93
Irish-themed Vegas casino that features a tattoo parlor owned by Mötley Crüe's Vince Neil 99
Irving Berlin standard that begins "Gone is the romance that was so divine" 85
Island called "The Keystone of the Pacific" by the Department of Defense 82
Island known for having "the wettest spot on Earth" (450+" of rain per year) 91
Island nation that was the setting of a 2005 "Survivor" season 72
Isolated prison area (represented by this 4x4 corner) from which the solver must escape 87
Issue of a U.S. beauty magazine historic for being the first sent to post-Soviet Russia? 88
It "delights by affording a shadow of the pleasure which exists in pain," according to Shelley 104
It "enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time": Merton 87
It "gives you something to do, but it gets you nowhere": Glenn Turner 79
It "is easy, and has infinite forms," according to Blaise Pascal 74
It "is no problem. You just have to live long enough": Groucho Marx 77
It "sounds like a bunch of Italian chefs screaming risotto recipes at each other," according to Aristotle Onassis 123
It answers the question "Do you know how fast you were going?" 72
It begins "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion" 88
It begins: "It was the best of times . . . " (with "A") 75
It blows; I just got scolded for using portable electronic devices and they're out of peanuts 97
It can be heard in Emerson, Lake & Palmer's "Lucky Man" 73
It comes from the Japanese words for "slice" and "broil" 76
It doesn't convey ferocious fuel-burning action, action, action! when it's regular-sized 96
It doesn't portray a big win nearly as well when it's regular-sized 75
It facetiously calls its regular writers "the usual gang of idiots" 77
It features John Trumbull's painting "The Signing of the Declaration of Independence" 99
It follows "Plastics" and "We'll always have Paris" on the AFI list of top 100 movie quotes 115
It forms a superhero when added to the start of the answer to each starred clue 79
It has ''arguments'' and ''logic games'' sections 81
It has "all the advantages of Christianity and alcohol; none of their defects," according to Aldous Huxley 116
It has counties named Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Jackson, Van Buren, and Harrison 101
It includes a vest ... and what can be found in each set of circles in the long answers 87
It lost out to "Leonard Part 6" for the 1987 Razzie Award for Worst Picture 85
It lost out to "Spirited Away" for Best Animated Feature of 2002 74
It may be charged by airport shuttle services if you're late from a flight 78
It may be given to a turkey before roasting, or a person during a massage 73
It might include the adverbs "forthwith" and "heretofore" 77
It might say "What part of 'cookie' don't you understand?" 80
It once had a jingle with the line "One little can will keep you running free" 88
It precedes "Substituted Ball" in the Definitions section of the "Rules of Golf" 100
It publishes an annual "20 Dumbest People, Events and Things" list 76
It put out the first crossword book in 1924 (and soon changed its name to Simon & Schuster) 95
It stands for "Committee for State Security" after translation 72
It states "as a Usenet discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches 1" 129
It states that a planet's orbit is an ellipse with the Sun at one focus 75
It uses only the 12 letters A, E, H, I, K, L, M, N, O, P, U and W (like eight long answers in this puzzle) 106
It was "boil'd in broo'," in the ballad "Lord Randal" 81
It was 2nd (behind New York City) on Travel and Leisure's list of America's Rudest Cities 97
It was once advertised as "Your favorite drink in your favorite flavor" 81
It was once voted "America's Most Innovative Company" by Fortune magazine 87
It's ''positively'' hidden four times in this puzzle 72
It's "heavier freight for the shipper than it is for the consignee": Augustus Thomas 98
It's "more fun than walking naked in a strange place, but not much," according to Buddy Hackett 109
It's "no longer current in natural colloquial speech," per the OED 80
It's about 325 miles east of Texas's H-Town, with "the" 73
It's along the bus route of ''Canada's Walk of Fame''? 78
It's been replaced on food labels by the Reference Daily Intake (abbr.) 75
It's bordered by three countries with "-stan" in their names 74
It's calculated based on the position of the sun relative to fixed stars, and is roughly 6 hours longer than its solar counterpart 134
It's classified by the U.S.D.A. as red meat under cooking guidelines and as poultry under inspection standards 114
It's crafted in prison movies to fool guards into thinking a prisoner's in bed, when he's actually escaped 118
It's crafted to fool guards into thinking a prisoner's in bed, when he's actually gone (as in "Escape From Alcatraz") 139
It's depicted by a cello melody in "The Carnival of the Animals" 78
It's derived from the French word "hautbois," meaning "high wood" 89
It's easy to do if you brought a headset, hard if your batteries died 73
It's easy to do if you're hungry, hard if it's late and the shops have closed 89
It's easy to do if you're not traveling alone, hard if you're surrounded by strangers 97
It's easy to do if you've got a book, hard if kids are bugging you 74
It's easy to do with the right connections, hard if you can't find a good hotspot 89
It's featured in the Marx Brothers' "A Night at the Opera" 76
It's found in dairy products, poultry, fish, lean meats, nuts, and eggs 75
It's good for "absolutely nothing" according to a 1970 hit 72
It's good for "absolutely nothing," according to a 1970 #1 hit 76
It's listed as "(annoyed grunt)" in "The Simpsons" scripts 82
It's made with bread at the bottom, bananas and fish in the middle, and potato chips on top 95
It's more of a privilege, really, in countries like Canada that have fairly strict gun laws 95
It's part of the eight original "Public Ivy" schs., per author Richard Moll 89
It's pictured in Van Gogh's "Starry Night Over the Rhone" 75
It's played to fool people into thinking that someone's calling them (as in "Manhattan Murder Mystery") 121
It's played to fool people into thinking that someone's talking in a room 81
It's put in front of a window to fool people into thinking someone is standing there 88
It's put in front of a window to fool people into thinking someone is standing there (as in "Home Alone") 119
It's soft, strong, and demonstrated by this puzzle's four theme answers 79
It's the end of The World!...actually, it's a radio station mentioned at the end of PRI's "The World" 123
It's the end of the world!...if you sort the countries alphabetically 73
It's the end of the world!...if you want to get really literal about it 75
It's the end of The World!...or at least it's seen in the bottom corner of the tarot card The World 107
It's the end of The World!...or not, since that was the first company to provide access to it in 1989 105
It's the end of the world!...or, the country home to Ushuaia, the southernmost city in the world 100
It's usually set at lower amounts in the first years of a player's contract 83
It's what Jack Benny says twice after being told, "Your money or your life!" 90