Crossword-Solution: CAVILS
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| CAVILS | anagram | CLAVIS, SLAVIC, VLASIC |
We have 11 clues for the answer “CAVILS”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| Objects pettily. | 1 answer |
| Picayune objections | 1 answer |
| Raises petty objections. | 1 answer |
| Trivial gripes | 1 answer |
| Raises trivial objections | 2 answers |
| Splits hairs | 2 answers |
| Trivial objections. | 2 answers |
| Carps. | 3 answers |
| Nitpicks? | 5 answers |
| Quibbles | 7 answers |
| Finds fault | 9 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
EETRA
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
12 +1
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Sentences with CAVILS (5)
Brand not my forehead with thy piercing light, For day hath naught to do what’s done by night.” Thus cavils she with everything she sees.
There is not in Bunyan’s conference, as there is in Dent’s, an _Asunetus_, who plays the part of an ignorant man to come out enlightened and convinced at last, or an _Antilegon_, who carps and cavils all the way; and there is not in Dent’s book what there is in Bunyan’s, a biographical narrative connecting the various parts of the dialogue; but the groundwork of each is the same—a searching manifestation and exposure of the nature and evils of various forms of immorality.
But is it by cavils like these that a great institution should be defended? And who ever heard the Established Church of Ireland defended except by cavils like these? Who ever heard any of her advocates speak a manly and statesmanlike language? Who ever heard any of her advocates say, "I defend this institution because it is a good institution: the ends for which an Established Church exists are such and such: and I will show you that this Church attains those ends?" Nobody says this.
But their principal objections being against his moral, the duration or length of time taken up in the action of the poem, and what they have to urge against the manners of his hero, I shall omit the rest as mere cavils of grammarians—at the worst but casual slips of a great man’s pen, or inconsiderable faults of an admirable poem, which the author had not leisure to review before his death.
Bathsheba had taken her religion after the fashion of her sect; but it was genuine, in spite of the cavils of the formalists, who could not understand that the spirit which kept her at her mother's bedside was the same as that which poured the tears of Mary of Magdala on the feet of her Lord, and led her forth at early dawn with the other Mary to visit his sepulchre.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: NYT, WP.
Used 10 times in crossword archives (1945–2005).