Crossword-Solution: BUNGO 5 letters, 3 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 8

Dictionary

Word Word Type Definition
Bungo n. A kind of canoe used in Central and South America; also, a
kind of boat used in the Southern United States.

We have 3 clues for the answer “BUNGO”

Clue Answers
JAPANESE channel 1 answer
AFRICAN canoe 2 answers
CANOE ___ 19 answers
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
TERAE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
14 +1

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Sentences with BUNGO (5)

General Byng, “Bungo Byng,” as he was called by his troops, won the admiration of the Canadian Corps which he commanded, and afterward, in the Cambrai advance of November, '17, he showed daring of conception and gained the first striking surprise in the war by novel methods of attack--spoiled by the quick come-back of the enemy under Von Marwitz and our withdrawal from Bourlon Wood, Masnieres, and Marcoing, and other places, after desperate fighting.
Now It Can Be Told Philip Gibbs 2002
Poor Crossman (since dead), McCulloch, and I were mates, and we were well off, for we had not only "Little Carnegie," and who, like his master, had been earning his living at Bayley's, but a camel, "Bungo" by name, kindly lent by Gordon Lyon.
Spinifex and Sand David W Carnegie 2004
Thus the Izumo worshipper of Kasuga-Sama can find in Osaka, Kyoto, Tokyo, parish-temples dedicated to his patron: the Kyushu worshipper of Hachiman-Sama can place himself under the protection of the same deity in Musashi quite as well as in Higo or Bungo.
Japan: An Attempt at Interpretation Lafcadio Hearn 2004
The local persecutions in Kyushu, for example, would seem to have been natural consequences of the intolerance of the Jesuits in the days of their power, when converted daimyo burned Buddhist temples and massacred Buddhist priests; and these persecutions were most pitiless in those very districts such as Bungo, Omura, and Higo --where the native religion had been most fiercely persecuted at Jesuit instigation.
Japan: An Attempt at Interpretation Lafcadio Hearn 2004
For this Will Adams was a Kentish man, who had "serued for Master and Pilott in her Majesties ships ..." The Dutch vessel was seized immediately upon her arrival at Kyushu; and Adams and his shipmates were taken into custody by the daimyo of Bungo, who reported the fact to Iyeyasu.
Japan: An Attempt at Interpretation Lafcadio Hearn 2004