Crossword-Solution: WODEHOUSE 9 letters, 7 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 16

We have 7 clues for the answer “WODEHOUSE”

Clue Answers
"Author! Author!" autobiographer 1 answer
Author of "Carry On, Jeeves" and "Psmith in the City" 1 answer
Creator of Jeeves. 1 answer
English writer known for his humorous novels and stories 1 answer
P. G. 1 answer
Writer P.G. __ 1 answer
Author 93 answers
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
TAREE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
20 +1

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Sentences with WODEHOUSE (5)

But look you, fellow, if I have somewhat filled out, thou, who wast always black-muzzled, art now become as hairy as a wodehouse.
The Well at the World's End William Morris 2008
Wodehouse, who has been very civil to me, kindly tried to get me a passage home in a French frigate lying here, but in vain.
Letters from the Cape Lady Duff Gordon 2013
SOMETHING NEW by Pelham Grenville Wodehouse CHAPTER I The sunshine of a fair Spring morning fell graciously on London town.
Something New P. G. Wodehouse 2000
Psmith, Journalist by Pelham Grenville Wodehouse PREFACE THE conditions of life in New York are so different from those of London that a story of this kind calls for a little explanation.
Psmith, Journalist P. G. Wodehouse 2001
WODEHOUSE New York, 1915 CHAPTER I "COSY MOMENTS" The man in the street would not have known it, but a great crisis was imminent in New York journalism.
Psmith, Journalist P. G. Wodehouse 2001

Quotes with WODEHOUSE (3)

I have written it before and am not ashamed to write it again. Without Wodehouse I am not sure that I would be a tenth of what I am today -- whatever that may be. In my teenage years, his writings awoke me to the possibilities of language. His rhythms, tropes, tricks and mannerisms are deep within me. But more than that, he taught me something about good nature. It is enough to be benign, to be gentle, to be funny, to be kind.
Stephen Fry
He lost his appetite for reading. He was afraid of being overwhelmed again. In mystery novels people died like dolls being discarded; in science fiction enormities of space and time conspired to crush the humans ; and even in P.G. Wodehouse he felt a hollowness, a turning away from reality that was implicitly bitter, and became explicit in the comic figures of futile parsons.
John Updike Pigeon Feathers and Other Stories
My father did not bring it up, but of course I knew that he had another reason to worry about my decision to write. Though he was a reader, he was not a lover of fiction, because fiction is not true, and for that flaw it was forever inferior to fact. If reading fiction was a waste of time, so was the writing of it. Why is it, I wonder, that humor didn't count? Wodehouse, for one, whom both of us loved, was a flawless fiction writer.
Eudora Welty On Writing
Where this answer appears

Appears in: Chronicle, NYT, WSJ.

Used 6 times in crossword archives (1967–2021).