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

Other crossword clues for answer "OER"

OER
___ the ramparts...
__ the ramparts ...
Above, in verse
Anthem adverb
Anthem contraction
Bard's preposition
Key contraction
Not 'neath
On high, in poesy
Poet's preposition
Pound's preposition
The Star-Spangled Banner contraction
Star Spangled Banner contraction
___ the fields we go...
Done to Donne
Poet's contraction
Poetic above
Contraction in the U.S. national anthem
Antiquated preposition
Burns's "Whistle ___ the Lave O't"
Apostrophe'd word in "The Star-Spangled Banner"
Contraction in "The Star-Spangled Banner"
O, it came ___ my ear like the sweet sound (Shakespeare)
Love, Reign ___ Me
Contraction that drops a "v"
Twelfth-to-last word in "The Star-Spangled Banner"
___ the fields we go, laughing all the way
Now ___ the one half-world/Nature seems dead." (Shakespeare) beq 0 OER The Angel that presided ___ my birth" (William Blake)
Thou knowst the ___-eager vehemence of youth (Homer)
___ the fields ...
Anthem preposition
Completed, in Lit
Start of the last line of "The Star-Spangled Banner"
Poem's contraction
Gliding ___ All (Whitman poem)
Above, to Key
__ the land of the free...
__ the fields we go
Poet's above
Above, in our anthem
Above, poetically
Poet's adverb
Above, in poesy
Above, to Byron
A change came ___ the spirit of my dream: Byron
The Star-Spangled Banner preposition
___ the land of the free...
Above, to a sonneteer
Atop, poetically
Above, to Auden
Gliding ___ All ("Leaves of Grass" poem)
Opposite of 'neath
And in the grave throw me and roll the sod _____ me ("Streets of Laredo" lyric)
Preposition with an elision
Contracted upon
Shortening in many a 17-Across
Cam Ye _____ Frae France? (Scottish folk song)
Gliding _____ All (Walt Whitman poem)
Homophone of 66-Across (if 66-Across were clued as an actual word)
Poetically on top of
Word heard 12 words before "Play ball!", perhaps
Lay the sod _____ me ("Streets of Laredo" lyric)
Finished, contracted
The potent poison quite _____-crows my spirit ("Hamlet")
Quaint start for "look" or "come"
Finish'd
National anthem contraction
Poetic preposition
Donne's "done"
On top of, in poetry
Word following "Through the perilous fight"
___ the ramparts we watched...
Bard's above
The Star-Spangled Banner elision
Contraction of "The Star-Spangled Banner"
On top of, in odes
Neath's opposite
Walt Whitman's "A Backward Glance ___ Travel'd Roads"
On top, of the world of poetry
Literary preposition
Above, to poets
Above, in an anthem
Jingle Bells preposition
Across, in verse
Preposition with an apostrophe
Give ___ the play (Polonius, in "Hamlet")
___ the Land of the Free, and the Home of the Brave
___ the hills and far away
Hover ___ me with your wings (Hamlet)
Above, in a stanza
Poetic contraction
___ the land ...
Contraction in "Jingle Bells"
Above, in poetry
Jingle Bells contraction
Star-Spangled Banner preposition
'Cross
Donne "done"
Key preposition
Eleventh word of "Jingle Bells"
____ the ramparts ...
Above, to a poet
Throughout, poetically
...the ramparts ...
___ vales and hills: Wordsworth
On top, to poets
Key's "above"
Above, in poems
Beyond, in verse
...__ vales and hills: Wordsworth
Above, to Milton
Atop, in verse
Donne's "beyond"
__ the fields ...
Above, to Blake
__ the land ...
__ the ramparts we watched ...
Above, in an ode
Above, to a bard
Anthem elision
'Neath opposite
Above, in odes
... lay the sod __ me: "Streets of Laredo" lyric
Not stepping __ the bounds of modesty: Juliet
Now __ the one half-world / Nature seems dead: Macbeth
On top of, to poets
Over simplified?
Come __ the sea, / Maiden with me: Thomas Moore
The Last Time I Came __ the Moor: Burns
Above, to Keats
Above, to Shelley
Ode preposition
Odist's contraction
Poet's "atop"
Poetic location word
A hot temper leaps __ a cold decree: Shakespeare
Lyrical preposition
... sadness comes __ me: Longfellow
... the native hue of resolution / Is sicklied __ with the pale cast of thought: Hamlet
I'll throw your dagger __ the house: "Twelfth Night"
Higher than, in poetry
On top of, in an ode
Done, for Donne
... this night, being __ my head: Shak.
Anthem word with an apostrophe
... __ a perfum'd sea: Poe's "To Helen"
Save me, and hover __ me with your wings: Hamlet
Poetic adverb
23 Down, to a poet
Above, to the above
Anthem word
F.S. Key preposition
Perilous fight follower
Done, for short
Francis Scott Key contraction
Rainbows __ yon mountain-river: Shelley
The days of frost are __: Tennyson
Atop, in poems
2 Down homophone
. . . __ land and ocean without rest: Milton
Atop, for short
Antonym of "'neath"
Contraction used by Key
Above, to the Bard
Preposition in "The Star-Spangled Banner"
Hamlet contraction
It precedes "the land of the free"
The Who's "Love Reign ___ Me"
Sweetly singing ___ the plains (carol lyric)
Robert Burns's "Whistle ___ the Lave O't"
What is that which the breeze, ___ the towering steep ...
Returning were as tedious as go ___: Macbeth
The Strife Is ___, the Battle Done (church hymn)
Atop, to a sonneteer
Above.
Above: poet.
Past: Poet.
Across, to poets.
Over: Poet.
Above: Poetic.
Over: Poetic.
Poetical contraction.
Poetic over.
Atop.
On top: Poetic.
Sicklied ___ with the pale cast of thought.” nyt 1954 OER Above, in one syllable. nyt 1954 OER Poetic contraction. nyt 1954 OER Poetic contraction. nyt 1954 OER Poetic contraction. nyt 1954 OER Poetic contraction. nyt 1954 OER Poetic contraction. nyt 1954 OERSTED Magnetic unit. nyt 1954 OES Letters. nyt 1954 OESEL Baltic island. nyt 1954 OETA Mountain chain in Greece. nyt 1954 OEUF Egg: French. nyt 1954 OFCOURSE Naturally. nyt 1954 OFFENBACH Composer of Tales of Hoffmann."
Across, for Poe.
. . . wind slowly ___ the lea.
. . . winds slowly ___ the lea.
Thy warfare ___ . . .
Bard's "over."
Poet's word.
Short for "across."
Poetic word.
Finished: Poet.
Upon: Poet.
Done: Poet.
Above, to Whittier
Across, in poesy
Atop, to Keats
Again: Poet.
Completed: Poet.
Across: Poet.
Ended: Poet.
Poetic contr.
The strife is ___.
Done, for poets.
Poetic term
___ the land of . . .
Finished, in verse
Poet's ended
Slowly ___ the lea
Bard's word
Done, in poetry
Word in poems
___ the ramparts we . . .
Atop, to poets
Beyond, to poets
Finished, in poetry
Ended, in verse
Upon, in poesy
Done, to Shakespeare
Finished, to poets
Anthem's "above"
The voice that breath'd ___ Eden: Keble
___ the hills . . . : D'Urfey
Above, to F. S. Key
Atop, to Key
Done, to Keats
Above, to Poe
Above, to M. Arnold
Above, to Swinburne
Above, to bards
Finished, to Poe
. . . ___ the bright blue sea: Gilbert
___ hill 'n' dale
. . . thy warfare ___: Scott
Poetic adverb or preposition
Across, poetically
Finished, to Keats
Over, to Poe
_____ the fields we go...
_____ the ramparts...
_____ the ramparts we watched...
Superior to, briefly
Burns's "___ the Water to Charlie"
Start of the last line in "The Star-Spangled Banner"
Star-Spangled Banner word
Preposition in "Jingle Bells"
___ a perfumed sea ...: Poe
One-horse open sleigh follower
___ the glad waters of the dark blue sea: Byron
Whitman's "A Backward Glance ___ Travel'd Roads"
Apostrophized preposition
___ courtiers' knees ...: Shak.
Give ___ the play: "Hamlet"
Canto contraction
___ the towering steep (anthem lyric)
___ the Water to Charlie (old ballad)
Contraction that sounds like a conjunction
Syllable-saving poetic word
Thomas Moore's "Come ___ the Sea"
Give ___ the play (line from "Hamlet")
Above, to Francis Scott Key
Across, in odes
Beyond, to Browning
Elided preposition
Throughout, in poetry
Contraction in a patriotic song
Or softly lightens ___ her face: Byron
Homophone of 55-Down
Preposition with three homophones
See 9-Down
Throughout, in verse
Anthem shortening
Beyond, to bards
The Strife Is ___, the Battle Done (old hymn)
Contraction missing a "v"
Contraction sung twice in the first verse of "The Star-Spangled Banner"
Shortened again
The Strife Is ___, the Battle Done (Easter hymn)
Utter your gravity ___ a gossip's bowl: "Romeo and Juliet"
Over-poetical?
Love, Reign ___ Me (song by the Who)
Poetic contraction that omits a "v"
Come ___ the Sea (Thomas Moore poem)
Anthemic preposition
'-- the land of the free ...'
Above, to Arnold
Atop, to bards
Atop, in poetry
Atop, in odes
On top of, in poems
Atop, in a 95-Down
67-Across, in poetry
Atop, to a bard
On top of, to bards
Atop, to a poet
Atop, to a 15-Across
Opposite o' 'neath
Star-Spangled contraction
Above, in a way
The Star-Spangled Banner word
Above, as ramparts
Kaput, to Keats
Sounds like Bobby
Love, Reign ___ Me (final song on the Who's "Quadrophenia")
___ the fields we go / Laughing all the way: "Jingle Bells"
Walt Whitman's "Gliding ___ All"
Gliding ___ all, through all, / Through Nature, Time, and Space: Walt Whitman
___ the ramparts we watch'd . . .
The ramparts lead-in
Throughout time, in prose
On top, poetically
_____ the land of the free ...
Ramparts preposition
Atop, in poesy
Poet's again
Above, to Shakespeare
The Star-Spangled Banner syllable
Love, Reign ___ Me (Who song)
Love, Reign ___ Me (hit by The Who)
Above, to Donne
Donne's "above"
Above, anthem style
Lazy poet's above?
U.S. anthem contraction
'Neath counterpart
Above, of yore
Above, to poets of old
National anthem preposition
National anthem word
On top of, old-style
On top of, to Key
U-turn from 'neath
Way-old "above"
Word with "the ramparts"
___ the fields we go ("Jingle Bells")
Across, in a "Jingle Bells" lyric
Above, in "The Star-Spangled Banner"
Done poetically
Poetic descriptive
____ the land of . . .
Aloft in poesy
Over, poetically
See 48 Across
Preposition before "ramparts" in an anthem
U.S. national anthem's contraction
Above, to Whittier or Keats
Quadrophenia song "Love, Reign ___ Me"
Francis Scott Key preposition
Above, in old poems
The Strife Is ___ (hymn)
Above ramparts, say
Angels We Have Heard on High contraction
31st word of "The Star Spangled Banner"
Poetic contraction meaning "above"
Stern convistion's _____ me stealing (H.M.S. Pinafore" lyric)
A voice flowed ___ my troubled mind: Shelley
Anthem word after "wave"
...a feeling of sadness comes ___ me: Longfellow
Soldier, rest! thy warfare ___: Sir Walter Scott
___ my Castle silence reigned: Shelley
And ___ his heart a shadow fell
Ariel guides you ___ the sea: Shelley
Wearily, wearily ___ the boundless deep we sail: Shelley
Above, to odists
The butterfly has flown ___ him as he lay alone: Stevenson
___ dale and hill the summons flew: Sir Walter Scott
Above, in the anthem
Good angels fly ___ thy royal head: "Henry VIII"
Apostrophized word in "Jingle Bells"
On top o'
And ___ his heart a shadow fell: Poe