Crossword-Solution: STEPHENSON 10 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 15

We have 1 clue for the answer “STEPHENSON”

Clue Answers
British locomotive inventor (1781–1848). 1 answer
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Dermatological complaint
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Hint 1 meaning
An inflammatory disease of the skin, characterized by the presence of redness and itching, an eruption of small vesicles, and the discharge of a watery exudation, which often dries up, leaving the skin covered with crusts; -- called also tetter, milk crust, and salt rheum.
Hint 2 anagram
CMEAZE
Hint 3 another clue
eruption
9 +1

New Suggestion for "STEPHENSON"

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Sentences with STEPHENSON (5)

Doctors Stephenson, Viola and Freemont, the three town doctors modem'ed prescriptions to Baker Pharmacy so the pills were ready by the time their patients arrived.
Terminal Compromise Winn Schwartau 1993
Stephenson adds that from a defect in the construction the abutments were thrust inwards at the approaches and the ribs partially fractured.
Industrial Biography Samuel Smiles 2008
The winter of 1888 I spent at Cairo under the roof of General Sir Frederick Stephenson, then commanding the English forces in Egypt.
Tracks of a Rolling Stone Henry J. Coke 2012
For them a Gilbert-Scott politician, reverential restorer of bygone styles, enthusiastic to conserve and amend the grotesque Gothic policies of the past, rather than some Brunel or Stephenson statesman, engineering in novel mastery of circumstances--not fearful to face and conquer even the antique impediments of Nature.
Ginx's Baby Edward Jenkins 1996
The prize was awarded to Stephenson's Rocket on the 14th; but it was acknowledged by The Times of the day that the Novelty was Stephenson's sharpest competitor.
Men of Invention and Industry Samuel Smiles 1996

Quotes with STEPHENSON (3)

Stephenson had large wrought-iron boiler plates available and he also had the courage of his calculations... The idea found its best-known expression in the Menai railway bridge opened in 1850. Stephenson's beams, which weighed 1,500 tons each, were built beside the Straits and were floated into position between the towers on rafts across a swirling tide. They were raised rather over a hundred feet up the towers by successive lifts with primitive hydraulic jacks. All this was…
J.E. Gordon The New Science of Strong Materials or Why You Don't Fall Through the Floor
Corporate anthropologist Karen Stephenson argues that though trust is the natural glue of human connection since prehistoric times, it is mostly absent in modern hierarchies — especially in government, where vertical silos compete with and undermine one another, often within the same bureaucracy.
Anne-Marie Slaughter The Chessboard and the Web: Strategies of Connection in a Networked World
If it hadn't been for Bill Macdonald's book 'The True Intrepid,' I might never have found out about the women who went down to work in secret in New York for our own spymaster Sir William Stephenson in the Second World War.
Susanna Kearsley
Where this answer appears

Appears in: NYT.

Used 1 time in crossword archives (1951).