Crossword-Solution: WHARFE 6 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 15

We have 1 clue for the answer “WHARFE”

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Yorkshire river 18 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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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ERTEA
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
11 +1

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Sentences with WHARFE (5)

Andrew Marvell described it two hundred years ago when he was poetizing beside the little river Wharfe in Yorkshire:-- "And now the salmon-fishers moist Their leathern boats begin to hoist, And like antipodes in shoes Have shod their heads in their canoes.
Little Rivers Henry van Dyke 2006
Reading a discourse about the River of Thames, the reason of its being choked up in several places with shelfes: which is plain is by the encroachments made upon the River, and running out of causeways into the River at every wood-wharfe; which was not heretofore when Westminster Hall and White Hall were built, and Redriffe Church, which now are sometimes overflown with water.
The Diary of Samuel Pepys Samuel Pepys 2002
Boreman's for pastime, and there staid an houre or two talking with him, and reading a discourse about the River of Thames, the reason of its being choked up in several places with shelfes; which is plain is, by the encroachments made upon the River, and running out of causeways into the River at every wood-wharfe; which was not heretofore when Westminster Hall and White Hall were built, and Redriffe Church, which now are sometimes overflown with water.
Diary of Samuel Pepys, January/February 1965/66 Samuel Pepys 2004
Pelling by chance come and dined with me; and after sitting long at dinner, I had a barge ready at Tower-wharfe, to take us in, and so we went, all of us, up as high as Barne-Elms, a very fine day, and all the way sang; and Mrs.
Diary of Samuel Pepys, March 1667/68 Samuel Pepys 2004
Boreman’s for pastime, and there staid an houre or two talking with him, and reading a discourse about the River of Thames, the reason of its being choked up in several places with shelfes; which is plain is, by the encroachments made upon the River, and running out of causeways into the River at every wood-wharfe; which was not heretofore when Westminster Hall and White Hall were built, and Redriffe Church, which now are sometimes overflown with water.
Diary of Samuel Pepys, Complete Samuel Pepys 2003