Crossword-Solution: OTIOSE
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Otiose | a. | Being at leisure or ease; unemployed; indolent; idle. |
We have 58 clues for the answer “OTIOSE”
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Kind of apple
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A
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
REETA
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
13 +2
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Sentences with OTIOSE (5)
Much of it is useful and curious; much merely otiose; and much can only be described as an attempt to impart that which cannot be imparted in words.
This note must appear otiose indeed to readers who have never heard of either of these two gentlemen; and perhaps there is only one person in the world capable at once of reading my verses and spying the inaccuracy.
Abruptly, after a long pause, he did now manage to say: "It was--very good of you to--to write me that letter." He told me he had only just got it, and he drifted away into otiose explanations of this fact.
Nay, its very shadow seems so richly heavy as to be the shadow of a fane erected by men endowed with a plethora of this world's goods to a god otiose in his grandeur.
Now that conception is considerably above the obsolescent belief in an otiose god which is usually found among barbaric races of the type from which the Australians are said to have degenerated.
Quotes with OTIOSE (3)
Belief is otiose reality is sufficiently awesome as it stands.
The standard modern measurement for inebriation is the Ose system. This has been considerably developed over the years, but the common medical consensus currently has jocose, verbose, morose, bellicose, lachrymose, comatose, adios. This is a workable but incomplete system, as it fails to take in otiose (meaning impractical) which comes just after jocose. Nor does it have grandiose preceding bellicose. And how they managed to miss out globose (amorphous or formless) before comatose is beyond me.
The Heaneys were aristocrats, in the sense that they took for granted a code of behavior that was given and unspoken. Argumentation, persuasion, speech itself, for God's sake, just seemed otiose and superfluous to them.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: Boston Globe, Chronicle, Crossroads, CrosSynergy, Custom, LAT, Newsday, NYT, Three Across, Universal, USA TODAY, WP, WSJ.
Used 160 times in crossword archives (1947–2024).