Crossword-Solution: MARABOUT
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Marabout | n. | A Mohammedan saint; especially, one who claims to work cures supernaturally. |
We have 15 clues for the answer “MARABOUT”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| AFRICAN burial place | 1 answer |
| AFRICAN hermit | 1 answer |
| AFRICAN monk | 1 answer |
| AFRICAN shrine | 1 answer |
| Muslim hermit | 1 answer |
| Muslim holy man or hermit of North Africa | 1 answer |
| NORTH African burial place | 1 answer |
| NORTH African hermit | 1 answer |
| NORTH African monk | 1 answer |
| NORTH African shrine | 1 answer |
| Shrine | 15 answers |
| Hermit | 16 answers |
| Africa bird | 18 answers |
| BURIAL place | 25 answers |
| Asia bird | 28 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
EARET
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
16 +2
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Sentences with MARABOUT (5)
Near at hand there happened to be an old marabout’s, or saint’s, tomb, with a white cupola, and the defunct’s large yellow slippers placed in a niche over the door, and a mass of odd offerings--hems of blankets, gold thread, red hair--hung on the wall.
Quick! Into position! Not a moment to lose! There was, close by them, an old Marabout (the tomb of a holy man) with a white dome: the big yellow slippers of the deceased lying in a recess above the door, together with a bizarre jumble of votive offerings which hung along the walls: fragments of burnous, some gold thread, a tuft of red hair.
About a hundred yards in front of the Marabout, on the banks of an almost dry river, a clump of oleanders stirred in the faint twilight breeze, and it was there that Tartarin concealed himself in ambush, kneeling on one knee, in what he felt was an appropriate position, his rifle in his hands and his big hunting knife stuck into the sandy soil of the river bank in front of him.
Our pilot, Scissors, was one of this class; he would not even cook his food in a pot which had contained hippopotamus meat, preferring to go hungry till he could find another; and yet he traded eagerly in the animal's tusks, and ate with great relish the flesh of the foul-feeding marabout.
Kites and vultures are busy overhead, beating the ground for their repast of carrion; and the solemn-looking, stately-stepping Marabout, with a taste for dead fish, or men, stalks slowly along the almost stagnant channels.