Clue | Length | Answer |
---|---|---|
Early time | 4 letters | morn |
| ||
Early time | 5 letters | sunup |
| ||
Early time | 7 letters | ironage |
Early time | 8 letters | stoneage |
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- A region cultivated many years earlier
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- Historical period
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- heyday for smelters
- Ignore a funny old epoch
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- Period in human development
- Early period in human history
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- Post-Neolithic period
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- Historic period
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- Period in civilization
- Stage of human progress
- A period of prehistory
- when metal-casting started
- I shout, taking on olden days
- Prehistory's last period
- period when metalworking began
- Stage of culture one runs on maturity
- i fume, taking on former time
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- Press have time in period long gone
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- Era when men began forging ahead
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- Prehistoric period
- Press one's years in a period BC
- Certain archaeologic era
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- period in history of a region
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- hard time
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- Even's opposite
- Dawn, to Donne
- Eve's opposite
- Even's counterpart
- When roosters crow
- In "Hamlet," it's "in rus
- Time starting at dawn
- Prenoon period, in poetry
- "September ......" (Neil Dia
- Neil Diamond's "September
- Literary time of day
- Early part of the day
- Daybreak, poetically
- Poet's sunup
- Daybreak, in verse
- eve's inverse
- Daybreak
- byron's time of day
- Poetic period
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- Daybreak follower, poetically
- Sun up
- Early hours
- Daybreak: poetic
- "September ... (Neil Diamond hit)"
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- what follows daybreak, to the poet
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- A.M. hours, in poetry
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- eve's counterpart?
- Evening's opposite
- Cockcrow
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- "Rise, happy ...... . . . ": Tennyson
- When Phoebus arises
- When Phoebus rises
- Poetic A.M.
- A.M.
- "On a St. Patrick's ...... . . . "
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- Poet's early hours
- poetic daybreak
- Sunrise time, in poetry
- evening's opposite, poetically
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- Dawn, to a poet
- The poet's half day
- poet's a.m. time
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- Pre-noon period, in poems
- Forenoon
- Either letter comes early in the day
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- Mornings, old way
- Before noon (for short)
- Dawn or sunrise
- Early hours, poetically
- Poetic time
- when to choose one of two letters?
- Poetic day starter
- early hours to a poet
- Poet's early part of the day
- Primitive
- Alley Oop's time
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- "The Flintstones" setting
- Caveman's era
- Much simpler time
- Rocky period?
- Prehistoric era
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- Prehistoric period
- pre-metalworking period
- Prehistoric period (2 wds.)
- Caveman's era [2 wds.]
- Caveman's time [2 wds.]
- Time for a mammoth feast?
- Prehistoric time: 2 wds.
- A prehistoric period
- Primitive time
- Antediluvian
- Fred and Barney's time
- Smelting ended it
- Neolithic period
- Cave man's era
- 85 for Irving in 1988?
- Neolithic time
- Time of the troglodytes
- Early period
- Prehistoric time
- Early time of man
- stage includes one ancient era
- Rocky time?
- Time before computers, facetiously
- Fred and Wilma's time
- Neanderthals' heyday
- flintstones time
- When the Lascaux caves were painted
- era for fred, wilma and pebbles
- Very old cardinal put on clothes
- one's gate could date back a long way
- stage one went wrong a long time ago
- Old-fashioned coach carried United
- Paleolithic period
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- Primeval
- Era of the Flintstones
- Time for Fred and Wilma
- Was it petrifying to live during it?
- Rocky period in history?
- wise man gets note about early period
- Phase + 1 = Ancient period
- When fire was harnessed
- Old time theatre one enters
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- Early time
- Crowing cue
- Dawn's body found in drink
- dayspring, in poems
- bedtime for a raver, maybe
- Dawn gets boy out of bed, we hear
- First light
- when the students rise
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- Something to crow about?
- Time to rise for many
- Bedtime for a vampire
- When a cock crows
- Daybreak
- Break of day?
- Aurora's big moment
- Eos's time
- Joke, American, about dawn
- Sunrise
- it follows dawn
- Start Of A Day?
- drink, taking in a french dawn
- Crack of dawn
- when one stops seeing stars, perhaps?
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- It's said, out west, to be in the east
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- Day's beginning
- Morning for a joke and us to return ?
- Aurora ......
- brightening
- Chanticleer
- Cockcrow
- cocklight
- Dawning
- day peep
- Daylight
- dayspring
- first brightening
- Light
- morn
- Morning
- peep of day
- Prime
- vestibule of Day
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