Crossword-Solution: SWAD
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Swad | n. | A cod, or pod, as of beans or pease. |
| Swad | n. | A clown; a country bumpkin. |
| Swad | n. | A lump of mass; also, a crowd. |
| Swad | n. | A thin layer of refuse at the bottom of a seam. |
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| SWAD | anagram | DAWS, WADS |
We have 3 clues for the answer “SWAD”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| loutish person | 2 answers |
| A BUNCH | 16 answers |
| fighter | 76 answers |
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ARETE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
13 +1
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Sentences with SWAD (5)
Ohio is most the only country I knew of where folks are saved that trouble; and there the freshets come jist in the nick of time for 'em, and sweep all the crops right up in a heap for 'em, and they have nothin to do but take it home and house it, and sometimes a man gets more than his own crop, and finds a proper swad of it all ready piled up, only a little wet or so; but all countries aint like Ohio.
For my own part, I must say I quite agree with the hosier, who, when he first went to New Orleens, and saw such a swad of people there, said, he ‘didn’t onderstand how on earth it was that folks liked to live in a heap that way, altogether, where there was no corn to plant, and no bears to kill.’ “‘My, oh my!’ sais Miss Letitia, or Letkissyou, as Pistol used to call her.
The old wife said that, as the bean is not seen till first it be unhusked, and that its swad or hull be shelled and peeled from off it, so is it that my virtue and transcendent worth will never come by the mouth of fame to be blazed abroad proportionable to the height, extent, and measure of the excellency thereof, until preallably I get a wife and make the full half of a married couple.
What a swad is this? I had been better to have sent him to the back-door, To have gotten some alms amongst the rest of the poor.
Bid him, that dare his impress batter once, Be well advis'd he be no beggar's brat, Nor base of courage, nor of bad conceit, To match himself with such magnificence, As fits Lord Pomp of London for his love: Call, if he come that can encounter me, [F]or move me not for each envious swad.