Crossword-Solution: BRUE 4 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 6

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BRUE anagram BERU, BURE, EBUR, RUBE, UBER, URBE

We have 1 clue for the answer “BRUE”

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SOMERSET river 7 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
EATRE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
19 +3

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Sentences with BRUE (5)

What, for instance, was the reason of her quarrel with the apostle; by the by, she never rebuked me for misquoting his words; and what is the moral effect (as seen through her clear brown eyes) of the Anglo-Bavarian brewery on the population of the small town and the neighbouring villages?" The road I followed from Shepton to Wells winds by the water-side, a tributary of the Brue, in a narrow valley with hills on either side.
Afoot in England W.H. Hudson 2004
Wallace, who had discovered the senachie of Brue by the escutcheon of Annandale suspended at his neck, gladly saw him approach.
The Scottish Chiefs Jane Porter 2011
Instead of which, had the body been laid in a natural position, and the lost heat gradually administered, by the application of warm frictions, a warm bed, &c., how easily in all probability, would animation have been restored!] The BRUE war bright, and deep and clear; [Footnote: The reader must not suppose that the _river Brue,_ is generally a clear stream, or always rapid.
The Dialect of the West of England Particularly Somersetshire James Jennings 2005
The w‚ter cold--the zunshine bright, To zwiminers than what high delight! 'Tis long agwon whun youth and I Wish'd creepin Time would rise and vly-- A, half a hundred years an moor Zunz I a trod the‰ze earthly vloor! I zed, the face o' Brue war bright; Time smil'd too in thic zummer light.
The Dialect of the West of England Particularly Somersetshire James Jennings 2005
But Ùten, Ùten by thie river, Have I a pass'd; yet niver, niver, Athout a thought o' _Doctor Cox_-- His dog--his death--his floatin locks! The moo‰st whun Brue war deep and clear, And Lammas d‚ an harras near;-- Whun zummer vleng'd his light abroad,-- The zun in all his glory rawd; How beautiful mid be the d‚ A zumthin ‚llËs zim'd to z‚, _"Whar whing! the w‚ter's deep an' clear, But death mid be a lurkin near!"_ A DEDICATION.
The Dialect of the West of England Particularly Somersetshire James Jennings 2005