% replaces any number of letters (la% - lake, lamp)_ replaces one letter (ca_ - car, cat)

Other crossword clues for answer "DAMES"

DAMES
Feminine titles
Agatha Christie and Margot Fonteyn
Titled women
Ladies
Lords' ladies
British nobles
Titled ladies
Women in pulp fiction, often
Wives of knights
Knights' wives
Women of distinction
Women, to a hard-boiled detective
1934 Dick Powell-Ruby Keeler movie
Tune from "42nd Street"
Maggie Smith and Judi Dench
English titles
Julie Andrews and Shirley Bassey
Helen Mirren, Judi Dench, et al.
42nd Street song
British noblewomen
Jane Goodall and Maggie Smith
Companions for knights
Noble ladies
Knights' ladies
Knights' women
Judi Dench et al.
Knight wives
Some titled women
Some royal wedding guests
Judi Dench and Helen Mirren, for two
Edith Evans and Edith Sitwell
Fonteyn et al.
It introduced "I Only Have Eyes for You"
Film that introduced "I Only Have Eyes for You"
Knights' female equivalents
Judi and Maggie
Some titled Brits
Christie and Dench
Many of Mike Hammer's acquaintances
Titles for Dench and Lansbury
Female equivalents of British knights
Titled British women
Female equivalents of knights
Tomatoes
What ain't we got? We ain't got ____! ("South Pacific" lyric)
Women of station.
Women.
The D in D.B.E.
Colonial ___.
Great ladies.
Ladies of high degree.
Matrons.
Care, Fortune, etc.
Sybil Thorndike and others.
May Whitty and Myra Hess.
Subject of song in "South Pacific."
Wives of baronets.
Certain British women.
Colonial ___ of America.
Mesdames.
Old-time schoolmistresses.
Good wives.
The ladies.
Titles of respect.
Housewives, old style.
Titled ones.
Relatives of dolls.
Noble titles.
Feminine equivalent of "knights."
Some women.
Women of rank.
Fortune and others.
Women: Slang.
South Pacific song subject
Gals
Nothing like them
Myra Hess et al.
Women of consequence
What ain't we got? in song
Gals and babes
Beknighted women
Sirs' mates
Singer Janet Baker et al.
Knights' counterparts
South Pacific group
Hess and Christie
Sutherland and Te Kanawa
J. Baker and M. Hess
Ladies' titles
Scarcity in "South Pacific"
Distaff knights
Beknighted females
Iris Murdoch and others
Classy ladies
Kiri Te Kanawa and others
Damon Runyon characters
Peggy Ashcroft and others
French face cards
Matriarchs
Skirts
I Only Have Eyes for You movie musical
Women who are entitled
Women, in pulp fiction
Grand women
Olivia de Havilland and Olivia Newton-John, for two
Women of honour
Some nobility
Emma Thompson and Anna Wintour, for two
Shirley Bassey and Agatha Christie, for two
Shirley Bassey and Angela Lansbury, for two
42nd Street number
Helen Mirren and Judi Dench, for two
Edith Evans and Agatha Christie
Evans and Sitwell
Women, to hard-boiled detectives
British honorees
British ladies of society
Agatha Christie and Judi Dench
Agatha Christie and Judi Dench, e.g.
Women, to film noir detectives
What knights' wives are called
Distinguished British women
Helen Mirren and Emma Thompson, e.g.
Actresses Anderson and Whitty
Evans and Fonteyn for two
Hess and Anderson <P>e.g.
Margot Fonteyn and Agatha Christie
Women of breeding
Dolls and molls
Women, in old detective novels
Knights' female counterparts
Magdalene Odundo and Helen Mirren, for two
Jocelyn Barrow and Judi Dench, e.g.
Kelly Holmes and Angela Lansbury, e.g.
42nd Street tune
Agatha Christie, et al.
1934 musical featuring "I Only Have Eyes for You"
Knighted women
Judi Dench and Helen Mirren
Iris Murdoch and Barbara Cartland
Judi Dench and Maggie Smith, e.g.
Some noblewomen
Penelope Wilton and Maggie Smith
Helen Mirren and Maggie Smith, for two
Judi Dench and Maggie Smith, for two
Julie Andrews and Maggie Smith, for example
Women, to film noir gumshoes
Maggie Smith and Helen Mirren, for two
Agatha Christie and Iris Murdoch, e.g.