Crossword-Solution: APERT
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Apert | a. | Open; evident; undisguised. |
| Apert | adv. | Openly. |
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| APERT | anagram | APTER, PARTE, PATER, PATRE, PEART, PETRA, PRATE, PRETA, PTERA, REAPT, REPAT, RETAP, TAPER, TERAP |
We have 2 clues for the answer “APERT”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| Opener | 72 answers |
| Open | 131 answers |
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Kind of apple
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E
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A
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T
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E
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
EARTE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
16 +1
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Sentences with APERT (5)
And therupon hire ordinance She made so, that whan Constance Was come forth with the Romeins, Of clerkes and of Citezeins, 680 A riche feste sche hem made: And most whan that thei weren glade, With fals covine which sche hadde Hire clos Envie tho sche spradde, And alle tho that hadden be Or in apert or in prive Of conseil to the mariage, Sche slowh hem in a sodein rage Endlong the bord as thei be set, So that it myhte noght be let; 690 Hire oghne Sone was noght quit, Bot deide upon the same plit.
Eke every wight knows this as well as I, If gentleness were planted naturally Unto a certain lineage down the line, Prive and apert, then would they never fine* *cease To do of gentleness the fair office Then might they do no villainy nor vice.
About our national life in this period, both in its virtues and in its vices, there is something--it matters little whether we call it--childlike or childish; in its "apert" if not in its privy sides it lacks the seriousness belonging to men and to generations, who have learnt to control themselves, instead of relying on the control of others.
And if thou hear of any man that speaketh, or of any that is still, of any that eateth or of any that fasteth, or of any that is in company or else by himself, think thou, and say, if thee list, that they conne do as they should do, but if the contrary shew in apert.[276] But look that thou do not as they do (I mean for that they do so) on ape's manner; for neither thou canst, nor peradventure thou art not disposed as they are.
But for because that fools are more than wise men, therefore for favour of fools such singular doers ween that they be wise, when (if it were wisely determined) they and all their fautors[300] should be seen apert fools, and darts shot of the devil, to slay true simple souls under colour of holiness and charity.