Crossword-Solution: NASHE
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| NASHE | anagram | ASHEN, HANES, HANSE, HASEN, SEHNA, SHANE, SHEAN |
We have 6 clues for the answer “NASHE”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| Author of Unfortunate Traveler (1567–1601). | 1 answer |
| W.S. contemporary | 1 answer |
| English satirist | 2 answers |
| Elizabethan playwright | 3 answers |
| Shakespeare contemporary | 6 answers |
| English dramatist. | 8 answers |
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ATEER
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
9 +1
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Sentences with NASHE (5)
All their service is in the Russian tongue, and they and the common people have no other prayers but this, “Ghospodi Jesus Christos esine voze ponuloi nashe.” That is to say, “O Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy upon us;” and this is their prayer, so that the most part of the unlearned know neither Paternoster, nor the Belief, nor Ten Commandments, nor scarcely understand the one-half of the service which is read in their churches.
Magic casements, opening on the foam Of perilous seas, in faery lands forlorn, q and Nashe in-- Brightness falls from the air; Queens have died young and fair.
They had one child, a daughter, named Elizabeth, born in 1608, married April 22, 1626, to Thomas Nashe, Esq., left a widow in 1647, and subsequently remarried to Sir John Barnard; but this Lady Barnard, the sole grand-daughter of the poet, had no children by either marriage.
John's College, Cambridge, was the chief seat of the new learning, of which Thomas Nashe testifies that it "was an universitie within itself; having more candles light in it, every winter morning before four of the clock, than the four of clock bell gave strokes." Greek was not introduced at the universities without violent opposition from the conservative element, who were nicknamed Trojans.
Among the accounts that are utterly independent of Phillips are those of Churchyard, Chapman, Daniel, Ford, Cower, Lydgate, Lyly, Massinger, Nashe, Quarles, Suckling, Surrey, and Sylvester.
Quotes with NASHE (1)
At every turn, while he was investigating the background for his study of Thomas Nashe, he would encounter the Church — what Chesterton called (another book title) The Thing. It was everywhere. At one point, he later told me (and he was never very specific just when that point occurred), he decided that the thing had to be sorted out or he couldn't rest. Either it ws true, or it wasn't. Either the entire matter was true, all of it, exactly as the Church claimed, or it was the…
Where this answer appears
Appears in: NYT.
Used 6 times in crossword archives (1946–1987).