|
GARRET |
Attic |
|
LOFT |
Attic |
|
ATTICAL |
Attic. |
|
TRAPDOOR |
Hinged attic entry |
|
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|
TRAPDOORS |
Hinged attic entries |
|
RHEUMATIC |
Creaky stateroom ... attic? |
|
HEAT |
Warm up in the attic |
|
TACTICAL |
Planned attic makeover with Cal |
|
|
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TITANIC |
Massive sort out in attic |
|
TACIT |
Attic characters made silently understood |
|
WYATT |
Mr Earp hid in shadowy attic |
|
ROOM AT THE TOP |
Prospect of advancement to the attic |
|
ROOMATTHETOP |
Prospect of advancement to the attic |
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ASIATIC |
Oriental discussed hazy attic with cockney |
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TACITLY |
Sneakily rebuilt attic with even bits of clay |
|
SALT |
Hence, also, piquancy; wit; sense; as, Attic salt. |
|
ANTIC |
Pole forcing out first tenant in attic for affair |
|
CONFETTI |
Prisoner next to iron attic uncovered fragments of paper |
|
TACTICIANS |
They make plans for battling attic scan I ordered |
|
MINA |
An ancient weight or denomination of money, of varying value.
The Attic mina was valued at a hundred drachmas. |
|
ATTICIZE |
To use the Attic idiom or style; to conform to the
customs or modes of thought of the Athenians. |
|
HELLENIC |
The dialect, formed with slight variations from the
Attic, which prevailed among Greek writers after the time of Alexander. |
|
AMPHIDROMICAL |
Pertaining to an Attic festival at the naming of a
child; -- so called because the friends of the parents carried the
child around the hearth and then named it. |
|
TETRALOGY |
A group or series of four dramatic pieces, three
tragedies and one satyric, or comic, piece (or sometimes four
tragedies), represented conseque... |
|
DRACHMA |
A silver coin among the ancient Greeks, having a different
value in different States and at different periods. The average value
of the Attic drachma is computed to have been about 19 cents. |