Welcome to the page with the answers to today's (March 2nd 2009) clues of New York Times crossword.
Below is the list of all of today's clues (a total of 78 clues). Just click on a clue to get the answer.
'How was ___ know?' |
'If I Had a Hammer' singer Lopez |
Afternoon social |
Air that makes you go [cough, cough] |
Alert to danger |
Annoying |
Antelope with a hump and twisted horns |
Antlered animal |
Asian new year |
Belly button |
Bitterly pungent |
Black goo |
Brit. resource for wordsmiths |
Cheapskate |
Chicago's winter hrs. |
College transcript no. |
Combat with fighter-bombers |
Commercials |
Course to breeze through |
Cut, as expenses |
Decorative gratings |
Draped Delhi dress |
Edgar Allan Poe story, with 'The' |
Emperor who fiddled around? |
Form rust, say |
Fort ___, Fla. |
Gentle rise and fall of the voice |
George M. who composed 'Over There' |
Ghost's cry |
Go wild |
Hacky Sack, basically |
Hi-fi supply |
Holds the title to |
Indigenous |
Ink stain |
Inspector Clouseau movie, with 'The' |
Invent, as a phrase |
Its brands include Frito-Lay and Tropicana |
Jock's channel |
John Steinbeck book, with 'The' |
Lewis Carroll character who's late |
Like the models in a swimsuit issue |
Martial arts actor Lee |
Money for the senior yrs. |
Ninth-inning relief pitcher |
Number of sides in a decagon |
O.K. Corral gunslinger |
One of 100 on the Hill: Abbr. |
Parapsychology subject, briefly |
Patients, to doctors |
Perfect example |
Pie à la ___ |
Plodding journeys |
Poet Gelett Burgess wrote that he never saw one |
Politico ___ Paul |
Popeye's Olive ___ |
Public square |
Pull out |
Rocker Bob with the Silver Bullet Band |
Rubbish holder |
Rye and whole wheat |
Salad cube |
Soapy froth |
Source of PIN money? |
Spooky |
Squealer |
Start a Web session |
Stats for sluggers |
Sty : hogs :: ___ : horses |
Swimmers' distances |
Symbol by the phrase 'You are here' |
Take furtively |
TV host Philbin |
Unspecified amount |
Walk with heavy steps |
What a cowboy may use while saying 'Giddyup!' |
What you might catch a tiger by, in a saying |
Yeats's homeland |