Crossword-Solution: BOOKER
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Booker | n. | One who enters accounts or names, etc., in a book; a bookkeeper. |
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| BOOKER | anagram | BROOKE, OBKERO, REBOOK |
We have 15 clues for the answer “BOOKER”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| 2020 hopeful Cory | 1 answer |
| Annual book prize | 1 answer |
| Cory, partner of Rosario Dawson | 1 answer |
| Mr. Washington. | 1 answer |
| New Jersey senator Cory | 1 answer |
| New Jersey senator-elect Cory | 1 answer |
| Senator Cory of New Jersey | 1 answer |
| Senator who briefly dated (checks notes) Rosario Dawson!!?? | 1 answer |
| Talk show employee | 1 answer |
| Travel agent, at times | 1 answer |
| ___ T. (big name in 1960s music) | 1 answer |
| someone who engages a person or company for performances | 1 answer |
| One of the Washingtons | 2 answers |
| Talk show V.I.P. | 2 answers |
| CONCIERGE PLACE | 10 answers |
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Kind of apple
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
AREET
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
13 +1
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Sentences with BOOKER (5)
Young Booker attended a school for the children of ex-slaves while, at the same time, holding down a full-time job in the mines.
The wisest and best leaders among the Negroes, such as Booker Washington and the late Charles Price, have tried to turn the attention of the Negroes from politics to the more profitable pursuits of industry, and if the professional politician would cease inspiring the Negroes to seek salvation in political domination over the whites, the race issue would soon cease to exist.
Dee, Lamb, and Forman; with Lilly, Booker, Gadbury, Evans, and scores of nameless impostors in every considerable town and village in the country, who made it their business to cast nativities, aid in the recovery of stolen goods, prognosticate happy or unhappy marriages, predict whether journeys would be prosperous, and note lucky moments for the commencement of any enterprise, from the setting up of a cobler's shop to the marching of an army.
Booker, Pond, Hammond, Rivers, Swallow, Dade, and “The Man in the Moon,” were all astrologers and Almanac makers in the early days of the civil war.
WHAT _Booker_ doth prognosticate Concerning kings’ or kingdoms’ fate? I think myself to be as wise As he that gazeth on the skies; My skill goes beyond the depth of a _Pond_, Or _Rivers_ in the greatest rain, Thereby I can tell all things will be well When the King enjoys his own again.
Quotes with BOOKER (3)
Prior to having sex for the first time, I had read many books and magazines, pornographic and otherwise, and I'd developed certain expectations of intercourse. From paperback romances I expected to feel vaguely yet ecstatically ravished, as if, for the duration of the act, I would experience everything an ad for a drugstore cologne could ever promise. From more serious fiction, I assumed that I would be blasted with a torrent of conflicting emotions, flashbacks to my birth, a…
The opening line of her last column was: You know you really don’t fit in with the other housewives you meet when the only way you can contribute to a discussion about babies is by saying, “Yes, that’s what my mother used to do.” It went on to talk about how a woman could climb Everest, teach schoolchildren in Cambodia and win the Booker Prize but some people would still think she had good news only when she produced progeny.
Unless society came out past Flat Rock Crossroads, kept on past Booker T. High School, hung two rights, a left, turned in on Milk Farm Road and found Roland plowing a tobacco field, jerked him off the tractor, warped him and set him back up there without anybody riding by and noticing, blame can't be laid on society.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: Boston Globe, Newsday, New Yorker, NYT, Slate, Universal, WSJ.
Used 12 times in crossword archives (1951–2024).