Welcome to the page with the answers to today's (December 26th 2015) clues of New York Times crossword.
Below is the list of all of today's clues (a total of 70 clues). Just click on a clue to get the answer.
N.J. home of the 'Ultimate Weapon' monument |
Nickname on a cattle drive |
One getting an across-the-board promotion? |
Ones with big butts |
Pac-12 sch |
Popular pinup publication |
Program with a 'Get Ripped' version |
See 2-Down |
Some Winter Olympians |
Something made on one's birthday |
Stump speeches, often |
Syllable of faux rebuke |
Take back, in a way |
The puck drops here |
Theme in much Greek art |
They'll stop traffic |
Traveling show with the number 'Trading Taps' |
Underneath all the layers |
Unwanted buildup |
What 'marriage is the chief cause of,' per Groucho Marx |
What's going on |
With 35-Down, Korea in the 1950s or Iraq in the 2000s |
Worth heeding |
Yo-yos |
___ foot |
'___ arigato' |
'... confirm ___ deny ...' |
'Benefit' of some 'friends' |
'Ea-a-asy, buddy!' |
'How dare you!' |
'This Perfect Day' novelist, 1970 |
0.5, for 150° |
Beasts of the wild |
Beijing-born star of 'Kiss of the Dragon' |
Call of Duty fans, e.g |
Calls |
Cartoon friend of Dumb Donald and Weird Harold |
Cast wide |
Character builder? |
City famous for bad traffic? |
Cog, so to speak |
Common hero in American literature |
Dermatological drug withdrawn by Roche in 2009 |
Didn't get a return from |
Diesel who invented the diesel engine |
Doc's warm treatment |
Emotional appeal |
Extremely |
Film character who brings the snowman Olaf to life |
First name in industrial design |
Form of Japanese syllabic writing |
General's opposite |
Greet from a ways away, say |
Group in many conspiracy theories |
Guru for hire |
Half of a rhyming candy duo |
Hawthorne's '___ Brand' |
His name was lengthened by God at age 99 |
Hold your horses |
Indian alternative |
Its flag is dark blue, symbolizing an ocean |
Journalist, informally |
Late-spring arrival |
Liaison |
Like some explosions |
Loathing |
Marlin's son, in an animated film |
Masonry-supporting rod |
Mathematician with a hypothesis unproven since 1859 |
Mesoamerican language with 400,000+ speakers |