Crossword-Solution: SUBTITLE
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| SUBTITLE | anagram | BLUETITS |
We have 22 clues for the answer “SUBTITLE”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| Foreign-film feature | 1 answer |
| On-screen translation | 1 answer |
| usually displayed at the bottom of the screen | 1 answer |
| translation of foreign dialogue of a movie or TV program | 1 answer |
| secondary title of a book | 1 answer |
| Word found at the bottom of movie or TV screen | 1 answer |
| Secondary heading. | 1 answer |
| It's usually at the bottom of the picture | 1 answer |
| Foreign-language film aid | 1 answer |
| Foreign-flick feature | 1 answer |
| Foreign language film add-on | 1 answer |
| Foreign film feature | 1 answer |
| Feature of some novels | 1 answer |
| Dialogue for Pearl White | 1 answer |
| Bottom line of film? | 1 answer |
| *Clever and indirect | 1 answer |
| "Came the dawn," e.g. | 1 answer |
| Nuanced | 2 answers |
| Nautilus | 5 answers |
| Not obvious | 12 answers |
| Underwriting? | 16 answers |
| Caption | 50 answers |
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Kind of apple
?
E
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A
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T
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E
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ETARE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
15 +2
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Sentences with SUBTITLE (5)
Also, the third book of the D’Artagnan Romances, while entitled The Vicomte de Bragelonne, has the subtitle Ten Years Later.
The title of the whole work is The Vicomte de Bragelonne, however, its subtitle is Ten Years Later, and so some older editions use that as the title.
The competitive metaphors with which he characterized it, especially the “struggle for life” prominently featured in the _Origin_’s subtitle, fit well with Victorian understandings about how things worked in the human arenas of industry, commerce, and geopolitics.
With eyes closed he would run this film again and again, cutting here, rearranging sequences, adding trims from suddenly remembered meals of the dead past, devising more intimate close-ups, such as the one of Metta withdrawing pies from the oven or smoothing hot chocolate caressingly over the top of a giant cake, or broiling chops, or saying in a large-lettered subtitle--artistically decorated with cooked foods--“How about some hot coffee, Merton?” He became an able producer of this drama.
The subtitle was, “Merton, won’t you let me give you another piece of the mince pie?” That was all, and yet, as screen artists say, it got over.
Quotes with SUBTITLE (3)
Thinking, not for the first time, that life should come with a trapdoor. Just a little exit hatch you could disappear through when you´d utterly and completely mortified yourself. Or when you had spontaneous zit eruptions.“Good book?” he asked, taking it from her and reading the subtitle, “A Guide for Good Girls Who (Sometimes) Want to Be Bad,” out loud. But life did not come with a trapdoor.
Had Mary Shelley fretted so? Maybe yes, maybe no. She’d begun her classic work on a dare. Had culled a dream to bring it into being. But it was not lost on Laura that the story might be a prolonged exercise in Shelley’s personal terrors. The subtitle of the work was 'Prometheus Unbound,' and Laura wondered if Shelley herself was not Prometheus in the form of the wandering monster, who desperately sought love and acceptance but was ultimately driven to face an icy landscape th…
Now we have come full circle to the subtitle of this book: children learn by unlearning other languages. Viewed in the Darwinian light, all humanly possible grammars compete to match the language spoken in the child's environment. And fitness, because we have competition, can be measured by the compatibility of a grammar with what a child hears in a particular linguistic environment. This theory of language takes both nature and nurture into account: nature proposes, and nurture disposes.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: CrosSynergy, LAT, Newsday, NYT, Universal, USA TODAY, WP, WSJ.
Used 17 times in crossword archives (1951–2025).