Opposite of none "Try ___" Fair amount "___ friend you are!" Whatever number Quite a few Not many "Bother" or "trouble" ending Ending for "bother" or "trouble" Unknown amount A smattering ... and then ___ "___ help you are!" Adjective-forming suffix Not quite all Two or th...
Not exact Set free Floppy No longer confined Opposite of tight Like some screws and translations Out of the barn, say Hardly tight Way to break? Not tight at all Unrestricted Inexact Lenient "Bustin' ___" (1981) "Bustin' ___" (1981 Richard Pryor film) Not in a package Having slack ...
Revealers can be located anywhere in the grid, but they most often are a long theme answer or they're in the exact middle (8th row down and centered) or they're the last Across answer of the grid (15th row and right-most). stack A series of two or more long answers one on top ...
The exact origin of the word “hoosier” is unknown, but has been around since at least 1830. The term had no direct linkage with Indiana until John Finley of Richmond, Indiana wrote a poem called “The Hoosier’s Nest” in 1833. A few years later, by 1840, “hoosier” was generally ...