Crossword-Solution: CARN
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| CARN | anagram | CRAN, CRNA, NARC, NCAR, RCNA |
We have 14 clues for the answer “CARN”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| Rockpile, of a sort | 1 answer |
| Stone heap: Var. | 1 answer |
| BURIAL mound (archaeol.) | 2 answers |
| tump | 8 answers |
| tumulus | 8 answers |
| carn | 9 answers |
| burial mound | 10 answers |
| megalith | 11 answers |
| CAIRN ___ | 16 answers |
| How | 22 answers |
| BURIAL place | 25 answers |
| Barrow | 29 answers |
| tomb | 47 answers |
| Low | 91 answers |
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Dermatological complaint
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Hint 1 meaning
An inflammatory disease of the skin, characterized by the
presence of redness and itching, an eruption of small vesicles, and the
discharge of a watery exudation, which often dries up, leaving the skin
covered with crusts; -- called also tetter, milk crust, and salt rheum.
Hint 2 anagram
EZACEM
Hint 3 another clue
eruption
20 +2
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Sentences with CARN (5)
Now, if I steal a matrass I am a lleidyr, that is a thief of the common sort; but if I carry it to a person, and he buys it, knowing it to be stolen, I conceive he is a far worse thief than I; in fact, a carn-lleidyr.” “The word is a double word,” said I, “compounded of carn and lleidyr.
The original meaning of carn is a heap of stones, and carn-lleidyr means properly a thief without house or home, and with no place on which to rest his head, save the carn or heap of stones on the bleak top of the mountain.
For a long time the word was only applied to a thief of that description, who, being without house and home, was more desperate than other thieves, and as savage and brutish as the wolves and foxes with whom he occasionally shared his pillow, the carn.
But I must here tell you that the term carn may be applied to any who is particularly bad or disagreeable in any respect, and now I remember, has been applied for centuries both in prose and poetry.
One Lewis Glyn Cothi, a poet, who lived more than three hundred years ago, uses the word carn in the sense of arrant or exceedingly bad, for in his abusive ode to the town of Chester, he says that the women of London itself were never more carn strumpets than those of Chester, by which he means that there were never more arrant harlots in the world than those of the cheese capital.
Quotes with CARN (1)
Carn Carby left, and ender mentally added him to his private list of people who also qualified as human beings.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: NYT.
Used 1 time in crossword archives (1976).