Crossword-Solution: TENNIE 6 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 6

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TENNIE anagram NIENTE, TIENNE

We have 1 clue for the answer “TENNIE”

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CANVAS shoe 3 answers
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ERTEA
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
11 +1

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Sentences with TENNIE (5)

Tennie” (their only maid) “has gone for a holiday, and I never can stay in this house alone with all that.” She pointed to the small bag he carried, which, as she knew, was filled to bursting with bank notes.
Midnight In Beauchamp Row Anna Katharine Green (Mrs. Charles Rohlfs) 2007
She had the supper dishes to wash up in Tennie’s absence, and as she was a busy little housewife she found herself singing a snatch of song as she passed back and forth from dining-room to kitchen.
Midnight In Beauchamp Row Anna Katharine Green (Mrs. Charles Rohlfs) 2007
Tennie" (their only maid) "has gone for a holiday, and I never can stay in this house alone with all that." She pointed to the small bag he carried, which, as she knew, was filled to bursting with bank notes.
Room Number 3 Anna Katharine Green 2010
She had the supper dishes to wash up in Tennie's absence, and as she was a busy little housewife she found herself singing a snatch of song as she passed back and forth from dining-room to kitchen.
Room Number 3 Anna Katharine Green 2010
When he could speak, he announced as well as he could that the wedding would not take place that night; that a terrible accident had occurred, and that Tennie Morgan was lying upstairs dead." Alice could not recall, even afterward, that Kimberly appeared under a strain; but she noticed as she listened that he spoke with a care not quite natural.
Robert Kimberly Frank H. Spearman 2012

Quotes with TENNIE (1)

There had been three of them once: James, then a sister named Fonsiba, then Lucas, children of Aunt Tomey's Turl, old Carother McCaslin's son, and Tennie Beauchamp, whom Edmonds' great-uncle Amodeus McCaslin won from a neighbor in a poker game in 1859. . .But James, the eldest, ran away before he became of age and didn't stop until he had crossed the Ohio River and they never heard from or of him again at all — — that is, that his white kindred ever knew. It was as though he …
William Faulkner Go Down, Moses