Crossword-Solution: UTR 3 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 3

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UTR anagram RUT, TRU, TUR, URT

We have 1 clue for the answer “UTR”

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Popular cruise port 3 answers
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Kind of apple
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E
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A
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ERTEA
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
18 +1

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Sentences with UTR (5)

The Sophists did much more darken Aristotle than illustrate him; like as that Friar did, who wasted two whole hours in a sermon about Christ’s Passion, and concerning this question: _Utrùm quantitas realiter distincta sit à substantia_—whether the quantity in itself were divided from the substance? He showed this example, and said, “My head might well creep through, but the bigness of my head could not;” insomuch that, like an idiot, he divided the head from the bigness thereof.
Selections from the Table Talk of Martin Luther Martin Luther 2014
The rest of the word remains unchanged, except in case of alteruter, which may decline both parts; as,-- _Nom._ alteruter altera utra alterum utrum _Gen._ alterius utrīus, etc.
New Latin Grammar Charles E. Bennett 2005
Hasdrubal, Poenōrum dux, Syphāxque Scīpiōnī sē opposuērunt, quī utrīusque castra ūnā nocte perrūpit et incendit.
Selections from Viri Romae Charles François L'Homond 2010
Atque ut hos aliquo modo leniremus et saltem tempus lucraremur, ut dilatione aliquâ adhiberi possint congrua remedia, hortati sumus ut communi consilio aliquem ad Sanctissimum mitterent, quod factum est, eumque ad Illustrissimum Nuncium in Flandriam direxi, ut ab ipso suæ Sanctitati commendetur; scriptis etiam litteris, quibus eorum sententiam exposui, et rationes pro utrâque parte.
The Condition of Catholics Under James I. John Morris and John Gerard 2011
Cassiodorus indeed, in the middle of the sixth century, is said to have compared the new and old Latin (of the New, perhaps of both Testaments) in parallel columns, which thus became partially mixed in not a few codices: but Gregory the Great (590-604), while confessing that his Church used both “quia sedes Apostolica, cui auctore Deo praesideo, utrâque utitur,” (Epist.
A Plain Introduction to the Criticism of the New Testament, Vol. II. Frederick Henry Ambrose Scrivener 2011