Crossword-Solution: HOOKE 5 letters, 22 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 12

We have 22 clues for the answer “HOOKE”

Clue Answers
English physicist: 17th century 1 answer
Telescope pioneer Robert 1 answer
Robert who introduced the term "cell" to biology 1 answer
Robert who coined the word "cell" 1 answer
Pioneering scientist Robert 1 answer
Law of elasticity discoverer 1 answer
Great 17th-century English physicist 1 answer
English scientist who coined the term "cell" in his 1665 work "Micrographia" 1 answer
English scientist who coined the biological term "cell" 1 answer
English physicist: 1635–1703 1 answer
English physicist Robert who has a law named after him 1 answer
English philosopher Robert 1 answer
English mathematician Robert 1 answer
Elizabethan philosopher/physicist 1 answer
Elasticity scientist 1 answer
Elasticity physicist Robert 1 answer
Discoverer of Orion's fifth star 1 answer
"Micrographia" author: 1665 1 answer
"Deadly Nightshades" fiddler Helen 1 answer
English scientist. 2 answers
Physicist with a law 2 answers
scientist 61 answers
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
TREAE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
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Sentences with HOOKE (5)

The invention of the balance-spring was claimed by Huyghens, a Dutchman, Hautefeuille, a Frenchman, and Hooke, an Englishman.
Industrial Biography Samuel Smiles 2008
The seventeenth century, however, gives us three names, those of Borelli, Lana, and Robert Hooke, all of which take definite place in the history of flight.
A History of Aeronautics E. Charles Vivian 1997
For that reason, he says, 'I applied my mind to contrive a way to make artificial muscles,' but in this he was, as he expresses it, 'frustrated of my expectations.' Hooke's claim to fame rests mainly on his successful model; the rest of his work is of too scrappy a nature to rank as a serious contribution to the study of flight.
A History of Aeronautics E. Charles Vivian 1997
Contemporary with Hooke was one Allard, who, in France, undertook to emulate the Saracen of Constantinople to a certain extent.
A History of Aeronautics E. Charles Vivian 1997
Hooke also considered the possibility of finding a way to quicken our powers of hearing.] A writer in the REPOSITORY OF ARTS for September 1, 1821, in referring to the 'Enchanted Lyre,' beholds the prospect of an opera being performed at the King's Theatre, and enjoyed at the Hanover Square Rooms, or even at the Horns Tavern, Kennington.
Heroes of the Telegraph J. Munro 1997

Quotes with HOOKE (1)

Leadership obeys the principle of Hooke's law to the very bone. It explains: When an elastic material is stretched, it returns to its original position. But when it's over stretched beyond its limit point, it loses its elasticity and becomes plastic, and later cuts or breaks. As a leader, in your leadership disposition, it behoves of you to acquaint yourself with this very leadership principle that edges forward. It's however, a human nature to adopt to an environment, so, le…
Richmond Akhigbe
Where this answer appears

Appears in: CrosSynergy, LAT, Newsday, NY Sun, NYT, Slate, Universal, WSJ.

Used 22 times in crossword archives (1955–2025).