Crossword-Solution: COLEWORT 8 letters, 3 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 13

Dictionary

Word Word Type Definition
Colewort n. A variety of cabbage in which the leaves never form a
compact head.
Colewort n. Any white cabbage before the head has become firm.

We have 3 clues for the answer “COLEWORT”

Clue Answers
Kale 10 answers
Cabbage 40 answers
VEGETABLE, type of 48 answers
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Kind of apple
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
RTEEA
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
15 +2

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Sentences with COLEWORT (5)

The village was more than half a mile long, the cottages being irregularly divided from each other by gardens, or yards, as the inhabitants called them, of different sizes, where (for it is Sixty Years since) the now universal potato was unknown, but which were stored with gigantic plants of KALE or colewort, encircled with groves of nettles, and exhibited here and there a huge hemlock, or the national thistle, overshadowing a quarter of the petty enclosure.
Waverley Sir Walter Scott 2006
Take the leaves of the wild vine (bryony, vitis alba); bruise them and boyle them, and apply it to the place grieved, lapd in a colewort-leafe.
The Natural History of Wiltshire John Aubrey 2004
The village was more than half a mile long, the cottages being irregularly divided from each other by gardens, or yards, as the inhabitants called them, of different sizes, where (for it is Sixty Years Since) the now universal potato was unknown, but which were stored with gigantic plants of kale or colewort, encircled with groves of nettles, and exhibited here and there a huge hemlock, or the national thistle, overshadowing a quarter of the petty inclosure.
Waverley, Volume I Sir Walter Scott 2004
The village was more than half a mile long, the cottages being irregularly divided from each other by gardens, or yards, as the inhabitants called them, of different sizes, where (for it is Sixty Years Since) the now universal potato was unknown, but which were stored with gigantic plants of _kale_ or colewort, encircled with groves of nettles, and exhibited here and there a huge hemlock, or the national thistle, overshadowing a quarter of the petty inclosure.
Waverley Sir Walter Scott 2006
The aid of a Highland leech was procured, who probed the wound with a probe made out of a castock; _i.e._, the stalk of a colewort or cabbage.
Rob Roy, Volume 1., Illustrated Sir Walter Scott 2004
Where this answer appears

Appears in: NYT.

Used 1 time in crossword archives (1975).