Crossword-Solution: PADDINGTON
We have 11 clues for the answer “PADDINGTON”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| Character from 27 works readapting 27 works | 1 answer |
| Fictional British bear who enjoys orange marmalade | 1 answer |
| London train station | 1 answer |
| London train terminal | 1 answer |
| Marmalade-loving bear | 1 answer |
| Michael Bond's bear | 1 answer |
| ___ station, Central London railway terminal | 1 answer |
| London station | 3 answers |
| ENGLISH metropolitan borough, former | 3 answers |
| LONDON borough | 14 answers |
| Bear | 75 answers |
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ETEAR
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
14 +1
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Sentences with PADDINGTON (5)
The journey from Plymouth to Paddington, by even the most headlong express, allows quite enough leisure for passion of any sort to cool.
Where may I take you to, ma'am?” “To the Paddington Station, and then if we are in good time, as I think we shall be, you shall tell me all about Mary and the children.” We got to the station in good time, and being under shelter the lady stood a good while talking to Jerry.
One is your case for collecting beetles, and the other is a stick, and the thicker and heavier the better." You may imagine that I had plenty to think of from the time that I left Brook Street until I set out to meet Lord Linchmere at Paddington.
Bradshaw had told him twenty times that Dr Grantly could not be at Paddington station till 2 P.M., and our poor friend might therefore have trusted to the shelter of the hotel for some hours longer with perfect safety; but he was nervous.
That the boats carried slates—that he had frequently gone as far as Paddington by the canal—that he was generally three weeks on the journey—that the boatmen and their families lived in the little cabins aft—that the boatmen were all Welsh—that they could read English, but little or no Welsh—that English was a much more easy language to read than Welsh—that they passed by many towns, among others Northampton, and that he liked no place so much as Llangollen.
Quotes with PADDINGTON (3)
Nell was like a witch. Her long silvery hair rolled into a bun on the back of her head, the narrow wooden house on the hillside in Paddington, with its peeling lemon-yellow paint and overgrown garden, the neighborhood cats that followed her everywhere. The way she had of fixing her eyes so straight on you, as if she might be about to cast a spell.
When a baronet is discovered behind a bush in the park with a guardsman, or a minister of the crown is caught creeping out of a country with his socks stuffed full of bank notes and a woman not his wife ten paces behind, or a public person is revealed disporting himself with a couple of tarts and a teddy bear in West Paddington, they complain to the press that the outcry is hypocritical and that everyone would like to do what they were doing if only they had the chance. They …
I've always had great respect for Paddington because he is amusingly English and eccentric. He is a great British institution and my generation grew up with the books and then Michael Horden's animations.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: NYT, USA TODAY.
Used 6 times in crossword archives (1984–2024).