Tip: Select
a length for advanced search!
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Letters | Answer | Clue | ||
| 99% | 4 | Exact Match! | ||
noun • a herd of whales | ||||
| 41% | 12 | With 105-Across, "What walks on four dino legs in the morning, four dino legs at noon and four dino legs in the evening?" and other riddles? | ||
noun • huge quadrupedal herbivorous dinosaur common in North America in the late Jurassic | ||||
| 37% | 6 | Alias used by Damon Runyon in some of his stories | ||
noun • United States writer of humorous stylized stories about Broadway and the New York underground (1884-1946) | ||||
Legs To Runyon
Check other possible answers below.
Best Possible Answers
Users Also Searched For These Clues...
We think you're currently doing a New York Times crossword, and other users also searched for these clues:
Shielded, in a wayGave kudos
Singer Kay
Clue Last Found In...
| Source | #Number | Answer |
|---|---|---|
| New York Times12 Jul 1987 | Across 15 | |
This clue was last seen in the publications above.
| ||
How's It Work?
Our Data
Our database consists of millions of crossword clues, anagrams, synonyms and more. We have over 9 million crossword clues with answers, 5 million synonyms and over 10 million anagrams. We also keep track of popular crosswords such as the New York Times(NYT) with the dates and answers for your convenience.
Even if we don't have the clue in our database, we can still find the answer for you. Simply filter by number of letters and enter any characters that you know of, and our algorithm will return any matching words or phrases.
Alternatively you can use our Known Letters Finder Tool
Check out past New York Times clues and answers, or the NYT Mini Crossword
Similar Clues With The Same Answers
Schools of whales
Seamen's chats
Pins
Underpinnings
Herds of whales
Legs, slangily
Tars' chats
Social visits
Whale herds
Cheesecake feature
Pinup features
Legs, to a zoot suiter
Pinup's legs
Pinup's pride
W.W. II pinup features
Groups of whales
Whale groups
Word for herds, pods or schools of dolphins, porpoises or whales; social visits, originally between whalers at sea; flocks of large sea birds; women’s legs; or, in the Scots language, mouths, teeth or tusks