Crossword-Solution: CHUMMERY
We have 19 clues for the answer “CHUMMERY”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| holiday home | 11 answers |
| bunkhouse | 12 answers |
| Guesthouse | 12 answers |
| flophouse | 15 answers |
| Hostelry | 16 answers |
| Chambers | 19 answers |
| rooms | 20 answers |
| pension | 22 answers |
| hotel | 23 answers |
| Lodging | 24 answers |
| Hostel | 25 answers |
| diggings | 26 answers |
| Habitat | 32 answers |
| Inn | 36 answers |
| Housing ___ | 47 answers |
| Quarters | 54 answers |
| Haunt | 61 answers |
| ABIDING place | 64 answers |
| Retreat | 89 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
EZEAMC
Hint 3 another clue
eruption
20 +2
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Sentences with CHUMMERY (5)
Then some boy of the chummery wherein Dicky lodged would pound on the door of his bare little room, and tell him to come out and look at a pony--the very thing to suit him.
Murray was in the same chummery; there were four chums till May.” “And Number Four has gone home?” “He has—to his long home, worse luck; he broke his neck fooling over a log jump.” On this fresh October morning the _Blankshire_ lay moored at her usual berth in Marseilles harbour, and the overland passengers were streaming aboard in great numbers.
Gregory stood in the veranda and watched them as they sped away together—the dark faded beauty, the pretty, fresh girl—and said to herself: “I wonder!” CHAPTER XV THE CHUMMERY The chummery to which Douglas Shafto had been introduced was a rambling old bungalow, and the edge of the Cantonment, sufficiently close to offices and work.
More than once he imagined that he had caught sight of her in the cathedral at evening service, but she looked so different in smart Sunday clothes—a feathered hat and gauzy gown—that he might have been mistaken, and he heard from MacNab (the gossip of the chummery) that Krauss had brought forward a remarkably pretty niece, who had recently played in a concert at the German Club, and made a sensational success.
After spending a few days in the English consul’s bungalow, the two friends started a little chummery near the river--a sitting-room, and a bedroom apiece, with a compound and outbuildings for their native servants.