|
WHICH |
What one? |
|
EATONESWORDS |
Retract what one has said |
|
EXTRA |
One in a crowd, what’s more |
|
LIPREADER |
One who sees what you're saying |
|
|
SCEPTIC |
One who doubts what others believe |
|
ANONYMITY |
What one assumes when not claiming credit |
|
NONEVENT |
Not one air shaft? What a letdown! |
|
OYSTERS |
Storeys is the only one-word anagram of what? |
|
|
PRUNER |
One who prunes, or removes, what is superfluous. |
|
PARROTER |
One who simply repeats what he has heard. |
|
PAR |
Just what one might expect, ... for the course |
|
NOSE |
To pry officiously into what does not concern one. |
|
PROMULGER |
One who promulges or publishes what was before unknown. |
|
APPROPRIAMENT |
What is peculiarly one's own; peculiar
qualification. |
|
OLD BAILEY |
What sprinter Donovan will be one day in London court |
|
ABSEILS |
What one who knows the ropes does to get grounded |
|
OLDBAILEY |
What sprinter Donovan will be one day in London court |
|
BEGGAR |
One who assumes in argument what he does not prove. |
|
RETAKER |
One who takes again what has been taken; a recaptor. |
|
DICTATOR |
One who rules that what he says should be written down |
|
BID |
To make a bid; to state what one will pay or take. |
|
ENVIER |
One who envies; one who desires inordinately what another
possesses. |
|
PROVIDER |
One who provides, furnishes, or supplies; one who
procures what is wanted. |
|
CLASSICALIST |
One who adheres to what he thinks the classical
canons of art. |
|
OBSERVE |
To take notice; to give attention to what one sees or
hears; to attend. |