- ENOW
- Sufficient, once
- Sufficient amount, archaically
- Oh Wilderness, were Paradise __
- Sufficient, to poets
- Antique "adequate"
- Aplenty, old-style
- Oh, Wilderness were Paradise ___!
- Shakespearean "sufficient"
- If we are mark'd to die, we are _____ / To do our country loss...: "Henry V"
- TV station's app in which you can watch full episodes of "Keeping Up with the Kardashians"
- App in which you can watch "Keeping Up with the Kardashians" on demand
- Shakespearean sufficiency (or what you might call Internet news?)
- Plenty, of yore
- Sufficiently, in poetry
- Adequate, old-style
- Plenty, previously
- Plenty, to a poet
- Sufficient, in poetry
- This once was enough
- Plenty, to poets
- It used to be sufficient
- Ample, literarily
- It was once sufficient
- Plenty, poetically
- Adequate, in verse
- Plenty of poetry?
- Plenty, in verse
- Ample, in verse
- There are liars ... __ to beat the honest men: "Macbeth"
- Sufficient, to Shakespeare
- I must not think there are / Evils __ to darken all his goodness: Shak.
- It used to be plenty
- Sufficient, to the Bard
- Plenty, in old poems
- Plenty, to FitzGerald
- Poetic adverb
- Sufficient, old-style
- Ample, old-style
- Wilderness were Paradise ___.” nyt 1944 ENOW Enough: Poet nyt 1944 ENRAGE Make angry. nyt 1944 ENRAGES Infuriates. nyt 1944 ENRAPT Overpowered by emotion. nyt 1944 ENRICHES Makes wealthy. nyt 1944 ENROBED Invested. nyt 1944 ENS Alchemic essence. nyt 1944 ENS Ensign: Abbr. nyt 1944 ENS Entity. nyt 1944 ENS Junior naval officer: Abbr. nyt 1944 ENSIGN Naval officer. nyt 1944 ENSIGN Naval officer. nyt 1944 ENSILE Store fodder. nyt 1944 ENSMALL Minify. nyt 1944 ENSTATE Install in office. nyt 1944 ENSURED Indemnified. nyt 1944 ENT U. S. general who took part in the Ploesti raid. nyt 1944 ENTAILED Involved. nyt 1944 ENTER Come in. nyt 1944 ENTERPRISE Famous U. S. aircraft carrier, saw action in Pacific arena. nyt 1944 ENTERPRISE U. S. aircraft carrier. nyt 1944 ENTERS Comes upon the stage. nyt 1944 ENTIRE All. nyt 1944 ENTIRE Consisting of one piece. nyt 1944 ENTITLE Empower. nyt 1944 ENTO Inner: Comb. form. nyt 1944 ENTO Within: Comb. form. nyt 1944 ENTOIL Trap. nyt 1944 ENTOM Insect: Comb. form. nyt 1944 ENTRANT New member. nyt 1944 ENTREAT Obsecrate. nyt 1944 ENTREES Main dishes. nyt 1944 ENVY Begrudge. nyt 1944 ENVY Malicious grudging. nyt 1944 ENYO Greek goddess of war. nyt 1944 EOAN Of the dawn. nyt 1944 EON Geological time division. nyt 1944 EOS Memnon's mother. nyt 1944 EOSIN Red dyestuff. nyt 1944 EPAULE Shoulder: Fr. nyt 1944 EPAULET Shoulder-badge on full-dress uniform. nyt 1944 EPEE Fencing sword. nyt 1944 EPEES Dueling weapons. nyt 1944 EPEES Fencing swords. nyt 1944 EPEIROS Pyrrhus united this ancient country. nyt 1944 EPERNAY Where France's best champagne is produced. nyt 1944 EPHEMERAL Transient. nyt 1944 EPI Ornamental spire peak. nyt 1944 EPI Slender finial. nyt 1944 EPIC An Iliad or Odyssey. nyt 1944 EPICAL Noble and heroic. nyt 1944 EPICARP Outer layer of pericarp. nyt 1944 EPOPEES Epic poems. nyt 1944 EPOS Epic poetry. nyt 1944 EPOS Series of high events. nyt 1944 EPSOM English racing center. nyt 1944 EPSOM Famed English racecourse. nyt 1944 EPSOM Scene of the British Derby. nyt 1944 EPULARY Pertaining to feasting. nyt 1944 EQUATOR Latitude 0. nyt 1944 ER Parenthetical sound. nyt 1944 ERA Period. nyt 1944 ERADIATES Shoots forth nyt 1944 ERADICATION Extirpation. nyt 1944 ERAL Of an epoch. nyt 1944 ERAS Ages. nyt 1944 ERASE Destroy. nyt 1944 ERASE Liquidate. nyt 1944 ERASE Liquidate. nyt 1944 ERASED Obliterated. nyt 1944 ERASERS Presents for solvers. nyt 1944 ERASES Obliterates. nyt 1944 ERASMUS Dutch scholar (1466–1536). nyt 1944 ERASURE Obliteration. nyt 1944 ERASURE Obliteration. nyt 1944 ERATO Greek muse of poetry. nyt 1944 ERATO Muse of love poetry. nyt 1944 ERATO Muse. nyt 1944 ERD Earth: German. nyt 1944 ERDA Earth goddess in Wagner's Ring of the Nibelung."
- Enough: Poet.
- Plenty: Poet.
- Adequate: Poet.
- Presently: Dial.
- Presently: Poet.
- Ah, Wilderness were Paradise ___!” nyt 1953 ENOW Oh, Wilderness were Paradise ___!"
- Enough: Archaic.
- Poetic "enough."
- Sufficient: Archaic.
- Sufficient: Dial.
- Enough: Poetic.
- Enough: Arch.
- Plenty: Arch.
- Plenty: Archaic.
- Sufficient: Poet.
- Adequate: Archaic.
- Sufficient: Arch.
- Enough: Dial.
- Omar Khayyám's "enough."
- Sufficient” in Old England. nyt 1960 ENOW Ample: Archaic. nyt 1960 ENOW Enough: Arabic. nyt 1960 ENOW Fully: Archaic. nyt 1960 ENOW Poetic enough."
- Enough, old style.
- Ah, Wilderness were Paradise ___!
- Plenty, in Chaucer's day.
- Poetically sufficient.
- Sufficiently, old style.
- That's all, in poetic parlance.
- Enough, to a poet.
- Aplenty.
- Plenty, for a poet.
- Enough, of old.
- Old "enough."
- Omar word
- Plenty for 5 Down.
- Plenty, to Omar.
- Sufficient, poetically.
- Adequate for poets
- Sufficient, to Omar
- . . . paradise ___
- . . . were Paradise ___
- Ample, for Omar
- Omar's rhyme for "thou"
- Plenty, for Omar
- Word with paradise
- Aplenty, in Paradise
- Omar's plenty
- Poet's "enough"
- Sufficient, of old
- Ample: Poetic
- Sufficient, in olden times
- Sufficient, to FitzGerald
- Rubáiyát rhyme for "thou"
- Adequate, once
- Enough, in poesy
- Plenty, to a bard
- Sufficient: Poetic
- Rubáiyát word
- Enough, poetically
- Enough, to FitzGerald
- FitzGerald's rhyme for "thou"
- Sufficient, formerly
- Ample, to FitzGerald
- Bard's "enough"
- FitzGerald's "enough"
- Sufficient, in poesy
- Sufficient, to a bard
- It used to be enough
- Adequate, way back
- Aplenty, in the past
- Sufficient for Shakespeare
- Aplenty, once
- Ample, poetically
- This once was sufficient
- Plenty, old-style
- ... there are evils ___ to darken all his goodness: Shak.
- Poetic "plenty"
- Sufficient, in "Macbeth"
- Stoppeth it!?
- Plenty, once
- Plenty, in dialect
- Sufficient, for the author of 70 Across
- Sufficing poetically
- Sufficient, to a poet
- This used to be sufficient?
- Once it was enough
- Plenty in the past
- Adequate, for Omar
- Sufficient, for Chaucer
- Sufficient, archaically
- ...there are evils ___ to darken all his goodness: Shakespeare
- ...my tale is long ___: Chaucer
- ...there are evils ___ to darken all his goodness: "Antony and Cleopatra"