Crossword-Solution: TRILLER 7 letters, 6 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 7

We have 6 clues for the answer “TRILLER”

Clue Answers
FIFER 7 answers
flautist 10 answers
flutist 12 answers
piper 15 answers
Warbler. 16 answers
instrumentalist 31 answers
✏️ Suggest another clue Know another question for crossword solution "TRILLER"? Please add your clue to the biggest crossword databank now!
Kind of apple
?
E
?
A
?
T
?
E
?
R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
EATRE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
13 +1

New Suggestion for "TRILLER"

Answer (solution)
Clue

Related word tools

Sentences with TRILLER (5)

Other older cases are as follows: l'Ecluse, seven days; the Ephemerides, four and six days; Col de Vilars, twelve days; Marcucci, eighteen days; Bartholinus, five days; Durande, five days; Boyer, five days; Capelle, twenty six hours; Fahner, eleven days; Marigues, thirteen days; Morgagni, eight days; la Motte, twelve hours; Rhodius, Riedlin, two days; Saviard, eleven days; Sennert, three days; Triller, fourteen days; and Tulpius, two and fifteen days; and Zittman, eight days.
Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine George M. Gould 1996
Michaelmas, so longingly expected, came at last, when I set out with delight, in company with the bookseller Fleischer and his wife (whose maiden name was Triller, and who was going to visit her father in Wittemberg); and I left behind me the worthy city in which I had been born and bred, with indifference, as if I wished never to set foot in it again.
Autobiography Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 2004
The child rescued by George the Triller's Golden Deed was the ancestor of the late Prince Consort, and thus of our future line of kings.
A Book of Golden Deeds Charlotte M. Yonge 2004
The word Triller took the place of his surname, and when the sole reward he asked was leave freely to cut wood in the forest, the Elector gave him a piece of land of his own in the parish of Eversbach.
A Book of Golden Deeds Charlotte M. Yonge 2004
Palsgrave has _curryfavell_, a flatterer, "estrille faveau," _estriller_ (_étriller_) meaning "to curry (a horse)." _Faveau_, earlier _fauvel_, is the name of a horse in the famous _Roman de Fauvel_, a satirical Old French poem of the early 14th century.
The Romance of Words (4th ed.) Ernest Weekley 2007