Crossword-Solution: CORRESPONDENT
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Correspondent | a. | Suitable; adapted; fit; corresponding; congruous; conformable; in accord or agreement; obedient; willing. |
| Correspondent | n. | One with whom intercourse is carried on by letter. |
| Correspondent | n. | One who communicates information, etc., by letter or telegram to a newspaper or periodical. |
| Correspondent | n. | One who carries on commercial intercourse by letter or telegram with a person or firm at a distance. |
We have 74 clues for the answer “CORRESPONDENT”
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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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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
EETAR
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
13 +2
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Sentences with CORRESPONDENT (5)
English, by the way, is relatively kind; our Moscow correspondent informs us that the corresponding idiom in Russian hacker jargon is `sovok', lit.
Amongst our lowest orders, the vocal organs are developed to a degree more than correspondent with those of hearing, so that an Isosceles can easily feign the voice of a Polygon, and, with some training, that of a Circle himself.
His only correspondent, so far as I know, was his own father.” “Who wrote to him on the very day of his disappearance.
His correspondent announced (writing in the third person—apparently by the hand of a deputy) that he had been unexpectedly summoned to London.
Weston was attending to some one else—and the pause gave her time to reflect, “Now, how am I going to introduce him?—Am I unequal to speaking his name at once before all these people? Is it necessary for me to use any roundabout phrase?—Your Yorkshire friend—your correspondent in Yorkshire;—that would be the way, I suppose, if I were very bad.—No, I can pronounce his name without the smallest distress.
Quotes with CORRESPONDENT (3)
Now she understood a few things: that the American academy, which one might have thought the place to defend freedom of speech, had been the seat and soul of abrogating freedom of speech, if the first assault on its freedom can be said to be restricting, or handcuffing speech. The day she heard “redneck” on NPR, she turned NPR off, not because broadcasters were still using the term, but because she knew one day they would not be. In fact, she had a vision of the quiet moment …
I see that I've become a really bad correspondent. It's not that I don't think of you. You come into my thoughts often. But when you do it appears to me that I owe you a particularly grand letter. And so you end in the "warehouse of good intentions": "Can't do it now." "Then put it on hold." This is one's strategy for coping with old age, and with death--because one can't die with so many obligations in storage. Our clever species, so fertile and resourceful in denying its weaknesses.
The great correspondent of the seventeenth century Madame de Sevigne counseled, "Take chocolate in order that even the most tireome company seem acceptable to you," which is also sound advice today!
Where this answer appears
Appears in: NYT.
Used 1 time in crossword archives (1969).