Crossword-Solution: NEBRASKA
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| NEBRASKA | anagram | BARSNEAK, BRANKSEA, RANKBASE |
We have 65 clues for the answer “NEBRASKA”
✏️ Suggest another clue
Know another question for crossword solution "NEBRASKA"? Please add your clue to the biggest crossword databank now!
Kind of apple
?
E
?
A
?
T
?
E
?
R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ARTEE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
9 +1
New Suggestion for "NEBRASKA"
Related word tools
Sentences with NEBRASKA (5)
The Wild Land I One January day, thirty years ago, the little town of Hanover, anchored on a windy Nebraska tableland, was trying not to be blown away.
She had brought her husband some property, too,—one fourth of her father’s broad acres in Nebraska,—but this she kept in her own name.
Riots occurred in places as diverse as Longview, Texas, Washington, D.C., Omaha, Nebraska, and Chicago, Illinois.
CHAPTER II PRO AND CON At the period when these events took place, I had just returned from a scientific research in the disagreeable territory of Nebraska, in the United States.
The admission of California as a free State was regarded by Calhoun as fatal to the balance between the free and the slave States, and thereafter a fierce agitation sprang up for the recovery of this loss of balance, and ultimately for Southern preponderance, which resulted in the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, the Kansas-Nebraska war, and the civil war.
Quotes with NEBRASKA (3)
The sun hitched up her trousers and soldiered on up into the sky. September squinted at it and wondered if the sun here was different than the sun in Nebraska. It seemed gentler, more golden, deeper. The shadows it cast seemed more profound. But September could not be sure. When one is traveling, everything looks brighter and lovelier. That does not mean that it is brighter and lovelier; it just means that sweet, kindly home suffers in comparison to tarted-up foreign places with all their jewels on.
The most common mistake students of literature make is to go straight for what the poem or novel says, setting aside the way that it says it. To read like this is to set aside the ‘literariness’ of the work — the fact that it is a poem or play or novel, rather than an account of the incidence of soil erosion in Nebraska.
Son, if you were any farther from fine you'd be in Nebraska.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: Boston Globe, Crossroads, CrosSynergy, LAT, Newsday, New Yorker, NYT, Rock & Roll, Slate, Three Across, TIME, Universal, USA TODAY, WSJ.
Used 52 times in crossword archives (1945–2025).