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ORIGINATES |
Comes (from) |
|
SILK |
Pajamas comes from it |
|
SEPIA |
What pigment comes from cuttlefish? |
|
PULSE |
It comes from the heart |
|
|
ROPE |
Thick cord comes from Europe |
|
AORTA |
It comes from the heart |
|
MACADAMIA |
In a nutshell, it comes from Queensland |
|
SOHO |
Oddly, snow hood comes from London district |
|
|
OHIO |
Even posh limo comes from Pittsburgh river |
|
ELY |
Eel, I say, comes from Fens city |
|
NEIGH |
It comes straight from the horse’s mouth! |
|
GOSPEL |
Music comes from the Bible ... it’s true |
|
FREMANTLE |
No charge for cloak where Perth’s doctor comes from? |
|
STRANGER |
One who comes from a foreign land; a foreigner. |
|
GREENHOUSE |
Kind of gas that comes from building in the garden? |
|
OCHRE |
Yellow earth comes from oak? Ah - so they say! |
|
TOPPING |
That which comes from hemp in the process of hatcheling. |
|
YORKER |
Low cricket delivery, though a new one comes from Manhattan or Queens |
|
CARDING |
A roll of wool or other fiber as it comes from the
carding machine. |
|
OUTCOME |
That which comes out of, or follows from, something else;
issue; result; consequence; upshot. |
|
UNEMBARRASSED |
Free from perplexing connection; as, the question
comes into court unembarrassed with irrelevant matter. |
|
COME-OUTER |
One who comes out or withdraws from a religious or
other organization; a radical reformer. |
|
PROCEEDS |
That which comes forth or results; effect; yield;
issue; product; sum accruing from a sale, etc. |
|
HAIL |
To report as one's home or the place from whence one
comes; to come; -- with from. |
|
MELADO |
A mixture of sugar and molasses; crude sugar as it comes
from the pans without being drained. |