Clue | Length | Answer |
---|---|---|
Writer had visor and mask lifted now and again to deliver some vernacularisms | 6 letters | idioms |
|
Add your Clue & Answer to the crossword database now.
SubmitLikely related crossword puzzle clues
- Hurdles for language lear
- Some dictionary entries
- Subject in foreign langua
- "Hands down" and "cold fe
- See red, talk a blue stre
- They're seldom taken lite
- Everyday expressions
- Characteristic modes of expression
- Tough phrases for new English speakers
- Tough-to-translate phrases
- Expressions, turn of phrases, sayings
- language quirks
- Common expressions
- they're not meant literally
- Figures of speech?
- make a scene and act up
- Common phrases
- Hurdles for language learners
- They're seldom taken literally
- "See red, talk a blue streak, etc."
- "Hands down and cold feet"
- Subject in foreign language class
- Hot potatoes and cold fish?
- Eat crow and talk turkey, e.g.
- Distinct styles
- Curry favor and crack a joke, e.g.
- They trip up foreigners
- Dialects
- Linguistic expressions
- Argots
- Characteristic styles
- Dialects of regions
- Regional dialects
- Hands down and eating crow for two
- Set phrases
- potential pitfalls for translators
- nonliteral language features
- Double-crossed and half-baked
- "out of the blue" and "in the red"
- Local expressions
- Vernacular phrases
- figurative expressions
- Hits the books and rings a bell
- "on the wagon," "eating crow," et al.
- Name another term for dialects
- Bits of dialect
- What is another term for dialects
- Easy as pie and piece of cake for two
- the bee's knees and the cat's meow
- "Play it by ear" and "all ears," e.g.
- Nonliteral phraseology
- Cold feet and cold shoulder, for two
- "Up in the air" and "on the fly," e.g.
- Contents of some dictionaries