Crossword-Solution: TINNED
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Tinned | imp. & p. p. | of Tin |
| Tinned | a. | Covered, or plated, with tin; as, a tinned roof; tinned iron. |
| Tinned | a. | Packed in tin cases; canned; as, tinned meats. |
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| TINNED | anagram | DENTIN, INDENT, INTEND, NNTIDE |
We have 13 clues for the answer “TINNED”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| Covered with stannum | 1 answer |
| Did soldering | 1 answer |
| In a can in england | 1 answer |
| Like British sardines | 1 answer |
| Like Sussex sardines | 1 answer |
| Like some kippers | 1 answer |
| Preserved, as sardines | 1 answer |
| Prince Albert's "in a can" | 1 answer |
| Put in cans | 1 answer |
| Put up in cans | 1 answer |
| Plated, in a way | 2 answers |
| Like sardines. | 4 answers |
| Preserved in a way | 12 answers |
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
EEART
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
9 +1
New Suggestion for "TINNED"
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Sentences with TINNED (5)
This pantry opened into a kind of wash-up kitchen, and in this was firewood; there was also a cupboard, in which we found nearly a dozen of burgundy, tinned soups and salmon, and two tins of biscuits.
Then they cut out the copra and put it into sacks, and the women would carry it down to the trader at the village by the lagoon, and he would give in exchange for it rice and soap and tinned meat and a little money.
The store was to the front, with a counter, scales, and the poorest possible display of trade: a case or two of tinned meats; a barrel of hard bread; a few bolts of cotton stuff, not to be compared with mine; the only thing well represented being the contraband, firearms and liquor.
There were casks of fresh water, kegs of biscuit, clothing, tinned meats, and a similar heterogeneous mass of flotsam.
This leghorn hat for a Nebraska country belle; a tombstone for a rancher's wife; a plow, brave in its red paint; coffee, tea, tinned fruit, bound for Alaska; lace, muslin, sheeting, toweling, all intended for the coarse trousseau of a Georgia bride.
Quotes with TINNED (3)
The trouble is, I can't find a part of myself where you're not important. I write in order to be worth your while and to finance the way I want to live with you. Not the way you want to live. The way I want to live with you. Without you I wouldn't care. I'd eat tinned spaghetti and put on yesterday's clothes. But as it is I change my socks, and make money, and tart up Brodie's unspeakable drivel into speakable drivel so he can be an author too, like me.
During World War II, when combat rations were tinned, meat hashes were a common entrée because they worked well with the filling machines. “But the men wanted something they could chew, something into which they could ‘sink their teeth,’” wrote food scientist Samuel Lepkovsky in a 1964 paper making the case against a liquid diet for the Gemini astronauts. He summed up the soldiers’ take on potted meat: “We could undoubtedly survive on these rations a lot longer than we’d care…
There's a widespread notion that children are open, that the truth about their inner selves just seeps out of them. That's all wrong. No one is more covert than a child, and no one has greater cause to be that way. It's a response to a world that is always using a tin-opener on them to see what they have inside, just in case it ought to be replaced with a more useful type of tinned foodstuff.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: Crossroads, CrosSynergy, LAT, NYT, Universal, USA TODAY, WSJ.
Used 14 times in crossword archives (1986–2022).