- MOONS
- Cheeky displays?
- Stares absent-mindedly
- Martian pair
- Turns the other cheeks?
- Offers some buns?
- Io and Callisto
- Orbiters of orbiters
- Indulges in reverie
- Phobos and Deimos, e.g.
- Stares wistfully into space
- They're usually invisible when they're new
- Lets have a seat?
- Many of them make a long time
- Planet orbiters
- Planetary orbiters
- Satellites
- Jupiter's Io and Callisto
- Ganymede and Europa
- Periods of time
- Brings up the rear?
- Butts out?
- Some Lucky Charms marshmallow shapes
- New and blue
- Daydreams
- Looks longingly
- Planetary satellites
- Many of Uranus's are named after Shakespearean characters
- Mercury and Venus lack them
- Mars pair
- Titania and Oberon, e.g.
- Pluto quintet
- Some satellites
- Mars has two
- Planet circlers
- Mars' twosome
- Gazes dreamily
- Saturn's 31
- Natural satellites
- Europa and Callisto
- They circle Saturn
- Astronomer's sightings
- Mercury's lack
- Telescopist's sightings
- Planets' natural satellites
- Deimos and Phobos, to Mars
- Ganymede and Lysithea, to Jupiter
- Phoebe and Rhea, to Saturn
- Responds to "Bottoms up!"?
- Till now some nine ___ wasted.—Othello.
- Months.
- Secondary planets.
- Acts lovesick.
- Wanders about dreamily.
- Jupiter has eleven.
- Jupiter has twelve.
- Satellites of Saturn.
- Heavenly bodies.
- I. G. Y. phenomena.
- Months, to Hiawatha.
- Companions of Jupiter.
- Wanders about listlessly.
- Behaves abstractedly.
- Broods, in a way.
- Dawdles
- Is pensive
- Indian time divisions
- Jupiter's XII
- Jupiter's dozen
- Io and Phobos
- Saturn features
- Acts dreamily
- Mohawk months
- Word after many or honey
- Callisto and Ganymede
- Indian time periods
- Many ___ (a long time)
- Callisto and Europa, to Jupiter
- Io and Ganymede, e.g.
- Is dreamy
- Presents with a seat?
- Time periods lasting about 29 1/2 days
- Hindsights?
- Mars's Phobos and Deimos
- Saturn has more than 80 of them
- Blue Lucky Charms marshmallows
- Gets cheeky with?
- Deimos and Phobos, for Mars
- Jupiter's Ganymede and Europa
- What Mercury and Venus lack
- Bottoms out?
- 311: "Many ___ since first I saw you"
- Many ___ since we did the do 311
- Engages in some cheeky behavior?
- Some Lucky Charms marshmallows
- Early Native American calendar units?
- They may be new or full
- Displays one's cheekiness?
- Jupiter has many
- Mars' two
- The two of Mars
- The 62 of Saturn
- Mars has two of them
- Two of them orbit Mars
- Saturn has 146 of them
- Saturn's 146
- Phobos and Deimos
- Ancient calendar units
- Certain satellites
- Crescent and half
- Saturn's 18
- Phobos and Deimos, to Mars
- They orbit planets
- Europa and Io, to Jupiter
- Jupiter has 67
- Titan, Rhea and 60 others, for Saturn