Crossword-Solution: MORRISSEY
We have 4 clues for the answer “MORRISSEY”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| "How Soon Is Now?" singer | 1 answer |
| Artist known as the Pope of Mope | 1 answer |
| Lead singer of The Smiths | 1 answer |
| EYEWEAR fashion label | 29 answers |
✏️ Suggest another clue
Know another question for crossword solution "MORRISSEY"? Please add your clue to the biggest crossword databank now!
Love or hate, for instance
?
E
?
M
?
O
?
T
?
I
?
O
?
N
Hint 1 meaning
A moving of the mind or soul; excitement of the feelings,
whether pleasing or painful; disturbance or agitation of mind caused by
a specific exciting cause and manifested by some sensible effect on the
body.
Hint 2 anagram
NTEMOOI
Hint 3 another clue
A FEELING OF GREAT ELATION
9 +1
New Suggestion for "MORRISSEY"
Related word tools
Sentences with MORRISSEY (5)
Morrissey tore in for the ball, got it on the run and snapped it underhand to Healy, beating the runner by an inch.
Ethel Morrissey, whose friendship dated back to the days when Emma McChesney had sold Featherlooms through the Middle West, used to say laughingly, her plump, comfortable shoulders shaking, "Emma, if you ever give me away by telling how many years I've been buying Featherlooms of you, I'll--I'll call down upon you the spinster's curse." Early Monday morning, Mrs.
Say, where's he been keeping himself all these years? Chip off the old block, that boy." So he had the men, too! It was in this frame of mind that Miss Ethel Morrissey found her on the morning that she came into New York on her semi-annual buying-trip.
Ethel Morrissey, plump, matronly-looking, quiet, with her hair fast graying at the sides, had nothing of the skittish Middle Western buyer about her.
She and Emma McChesney had been friends from the day that Ethel Morrissey had bought her first cautious bill of Featherlooms.
Quotes with MORRISSEY (3)
Dimanchophobia: Fear of Sundays, not in a religious sense but rather, a condition that reflects fear of unstructured time. Also known as acalendrical anxiety. Not to be confused with didominicaphobia, or kyriakephobia, fear of the Lord's Day. Dimanchophobia is a mental condition created by modernism and industrialism. Dimanchophobes particularly dislike the period between Christmas and New Year's, when days of the week lose their significance and time blurs into a perpetual S…
The danger of restorative nostalgia lies in its belief that the mutilated 'wholeness' of the body politic can be repaired. But the reflective nostalgic understands deep down that loss is irrecoverable: Time wounds all wholes. To exist in Time is to suffer through an endless exile, a successive severing from those precious few moments of feeling at home in the world. In pop terms, Morrissey is the supreme poet of reflective nostalgia.
The paradox is that I have no love for myself as a human being, but I have immense pride in the music I make, and I believe it has an important place. Others do, too, and the thousands of people with Morrissey tattoos certainly proves something.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: New Yorker, Onion.
Used 2 times in crossword archives (2012–2018).