Answer: AHAB
AHAB is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted over 20 times. There are related answers (shown below). Try defining AHAB with Google.
Referring crossword puzzle clues
- "Moby-Dick" captain
- Melville captain
- Biblical king
- Jezebel's husband
- Fictional whaler
- Pequod captain
- Captain of the Pequod
- Moby Dick's pursuer
- Moby Dick pursuer
- Fictional captain
- Starbuck's boss
- Ishmael's captain
- Obsessed captain
- King of Israel
- Melville mariner
- Queequeg's captain
- Melville character
- Captain of fiction
- "Moby Dick" captain
- Gregory Peck role
- Moby Dick chaser
- A king of Israel
- Pequod's captain
- Literary captain
- Husband of Jezebel
- Captain with a whalebone leg
- Pequod skipper
- Moby-Dick's pursuer
- Captain of literature
- Starbuck's captain
- Melville whaler
- Melville hero
- Ishmael's skipper
- Pequod's skipper
- Peck role
- Obsessed whaler
- Melville's captain
- King in I Kings
- Ill-fated whaler
- Captain who says, "The white whale tasks me"
- Whaler of fiction
- Starbuck's orderer
- Quaker captain of fiction
- Obsessive whaler of fiction
- Monomaniacal captain
- Moby's pursuer
- Melville's whaler
- Melville monomaniac
- Literary whaler
- Character with a whalebone leg
- ''Moby-Dick'' captain
- Whale-hunting captain of literature
- Starbuck's superior
- Starbuck's skipper
- Role for Peck
- Obsessed mariner
- Obsessed captain in "Moby-Dick"
- Moby menacer
- Melville protagonist
- King of Kings
- Jezebel's spouse
- Ishmael's boss
- Gregory Peck role of 1956
- Fictional Quaker captain
- Fictional mariner
- Famous whaler
- Famous captain
- "Call me Ishmael" speaker
- 'Moby Dick' captain
- White whale pursuer of fiction
- Whale-seeker of note
- Whale chaser
- Starbuck's order giver
- Quaker captain of literature
- Pursuer of Moby Dick
- Pequod pilot
- Peglegged whaler
- Peck part
- One-legged captain of fiction
- Obsessive whaler
- Obsessed skipper
- Obsessed fictional captain
- Melville's monomaniacal mariner
- Melville's doomed captain
- Literary skipper
- Literary monomaniac
- King in 1 Kings
- Ill-fated whaler of fiction
- Giver of Starbuck's orders
- Fictional skipper
- Fictional hunter
- Captain with a whale of an obsession?
- Captain in "Moby-Dick"
- Captain created by Herman Melville
- 1956 Peck role
- 1956 Gregory Peck role
- "Moby Dick" protagonist
- "... thou damned whale!" speaker
- White-whale pursuer
- White whale hunter
- Whaler played by Peck
- Whaleboat captain of fiction
- Whale watcher
- Vengeful Quaker of literature
- Vengeful captain
- To whom Starbuck says, "I came here to hunt whales, not my commander's vengeance"
- The whaler Pequod's captain
- The Pequod's captain
- Single-minded captain
- Seventh king of Israel
- Queequeg's boss
- One-legged whaler
- One giving Starbuck orders?
- Obsessed whaler of literature
- Obsessed whale hunter
- Monomaniacal mariner from Melville's mind
- Monomaniacal mariner
- Monomaniac of fiction
- Moby-Dick's chaser
- Moby-Dick captain
- Moby Dick's hunter
- Moby Dick's chaser
- Memorable Gregory Peck role
- Melville's whale chaser
- Melville's monomaniac
- Melville's maniacal mariner
- Melville's fanatical whaler
- Melville's curmudgeon
- Melville's "grand, ungodly, god-like man"
- Melville tyrant
- Melville megalomaniac
- Mariner in a classic literary tale
- Legendary captain
- Ishmael's superior
- Ill-fated captain
- His last words were "Thus, I give up the spear!"
- He rebuilt Jericho
- Gregory Peck's "Moby Dick" role
- Fixated captain of fiction
- Fictional one-legged captain
- Deranged captain in "Moby-Dick"
- Character with an ivory leg
- Captain who chased Moby-Dick
- Captain in a whale of a tale
- Captain chronicled by Melville
- Barrie's inspiration for Hook
- A Melville captain
- "To the last I grapple with thee" speaker
- "Pequod" captain
- "Moby-Dick" skipper
- "Moby-Dick "captain
- "Moby Dick" skipper
- "Grand, ungodly, godlike man" of fiction
- ''Moby Dick'' captain
- Wicked king of Israel
- Wicked king in the Torah
- Wicked biblical king
- White whale searcher
- White whale pursuer
- White whale chaser
- Whaling ship captain of fiction
- Whaling name
- Whaling captain with the nickname "Old Thunder"
- Whaler sailor
- Whaler of literature
- Whaler in a Melville book
- Whale-tale captain
- Whale-obsessed captain created by Herman Melville
- Whale-hunting captain in "Moby-Dick"
- Whale stalker
- Whale of a captain?
- Vindictive Quaker of fiction
- Vengeful whaler
- Vengeful whale watcher
- Vengeful sailor
- Vengeful Quaker of fiction
- Vengeful captain in "Moby-Dick"
- Unipodal whaler
- The Pequod's skipper
- Subject of Ishmael's tale
- Starring role for John Barrymore and Gregory Peck
- Starbuck's hirer
- Starbuck's fan?
- Source of Starbuck's orders
- Son of Omri
- Ship captain in the novel "Moby-Dick"
- Seeker of Moby Dick
- Sea role for Gregory
- Scarred skipper[SEE NOTE ABOVE]
- Scarred literary character
- Role for Gregory Peck: 1956
- Queequeg's captain on the Pequod
- Pursuer of the "accursed white whale"
- Pursuer of an "accursed white whale"
- Pip was his cabin boy
- Pequot skipper
- Pequod's obsessed captain
- Pequod's master
- Pequod pegleg
- Peg-legged literary captain
- Peg-legged "Moby-Dick" captain
- Peck role: 1956
- Peck role of 1956
- Peck portrayal
- Peck in "Moby Dick"
- One-legged, single-minded sea captain
- One-legged whaler of fiction
- One-legged protagonist
- One-legged literary character
- One-legged captain of fiction.
- One-legged captain
- One giving Starbuck's orders
- Obsessive whale hunter of fiction
- Obsessive sailor
- Obsessive of 1850s literature
- Obsessive Melville character
- Obsessive literary captain
- Obsessive hunter of fiction
- Obsessive fictional skipper
- Obsessedwhaler
- Obsessed whaler of fiction
- Obsessed whaler captain
- Obsessed ship captain hunting for a whale called Moby Dick, in an 1851 novel
- Obsessed sailor
- Obsessed fictional whaler
- Obsessed captain of the Pequod
- Obsessed captain of literature
- Obsessed captain of fiction
- Noted whaler
- Noted whale hunter
- Noted one-legged captain
- Noted obsessive of literature
- Notable mariner of literature
- Notable harpoon wielder
- Monomaniacal whaler
- Monomaniacal skipper
- Monomaniacal seafarer of fiction
- Monomaniacal mariner of fiction
- Monomaniacal captain of literature
- Monomaniacal captain in fiction
- Model of vengeful obsession
- Model for Hook
- Model for Captain Hook
- Moby-Dick skipper
- Moby-Dick seeker
- Moby-Dick pursuer
- Moby-Dick chaser
- Moby Dick's victim
- Moby Dick's adversary
- Moby Dick was his nemesis
- Moby Dick seeker
- Moby Dick sea captain
- Moby Dick captain
- Mighty whaler
- Melville's white-whale hunter
- Melville's whaling captain
- Melville's whale pursuer
- Melville's whale hunter
- Melville's skipper
- Melville's searcher
- Melville's obsessive whaler
- Melville's obsessed whaler
- Melville's obsessed mariner
- Melville's obsessed captain
- Melville's megalomaniacal mariner
- Melville's mariner
- Melville's madman
- Melville's ill-fated captain
- Melville's "ungodly, god-like man"
- Melville skipper
- Melville seaman
- Melville novel mariner
- Marvel character based on a Herman Melville character
- Mariner in a whale of a novel?
- Maniacal Melville mariner
- Man with a white scar
- Literature's self-styled "poor pegging lubber"
- Literary whale hunter
- Literary protagonist named after a king of Israel
- Literary lead role for Gregory Peck in 1956
- Literary hunter
- Literary character whose last words are "Thus, I give up the spear!"
- Literary character who says "I'll chase him round Good Hope"
- Literary character who says "For hate's sake, I spit my last breath at thee"
- Literary character who needed to chill out about that white whale
- Literary character played by Gregory Peck, Patrick Stewart and Orson Welles
- Literary character on whom Captain Hook is based
- Literary character likened to a "mute, maned sea-lion"
- Literary character described as "a Khan of the plank, and a king of the sea, and a great lord of Leviathans"
- Literary captain with a leg made of whalebone
- Literary captain whose last words are "Thus, I give up the spear!"
- Literary captain who says "I'd strike the sun if it insulted me"
- Literary captain who inspired Captain Hook
- Literary captain obsessed with a whale
- Literary captain described as a "grand, ungodly, god-like man"
- King who married Jezebel
- King of Israel, ninth century B.C.
- King of Israel in 1 Kings
- Jezebels husband
- Jezebel’s husband.
- Jezebel's king
- Jezebel's husband.
- Jezebel's husband — Moby Dick's hunter
- Jezebel's better half
- Ivory-legged whaler
- Israelite king
- Israel's seventh ruler
- Ishmaels skipper
- Ishmael's boss [SEE NOTE ABOVE.]
- Inspiration for Captain Hook
- Ill-fated whaler of literature
- Ill-fated whale chaser
- Ill-fated literary captain
- Ill-fated captain of fiction
- I Kings king
- Husband of Jezebel in the Bible
- Hunting captain
- Hunter of Moby Dick
- His last voyage originated in New Bedford
- HermanMelville character
- Herman Melville's obsessed sea captain
- He sought "the monstrousest parmacetty" [3-10]
- He knew his cetacean in life
- He has many hands and a prosthetic leg
- He has a cetacean fixation
- He gives Starbuck's orders
- Gregory Peck role: 1956
- Great white hunter?
- From Hell's heart he stabbed at thee (thee is a whale)
- Fixated fictional captain
- Fictional whale hunter
- Fictional seeker of vengeance
- Fictional sea hunter
- Fictional pursuer of a white whale
- Fictional one-legged skipper
- Fictional obsessive sailor
- Fictional monomaniac
- Fictional character who says "I'd strike the sun if it insulted me"
- Fictional character who says "I now prophesy that I will dismember my dismemberer"
- Fictional character who declares "Sleep? ... I do not sleep, I die"
- Fictional captain with an ivory leg
- Fictional captain with a whale of an obsession
- Fictional captain with a fixation
- Fictional captain whose nickname is "Old Thunder"
- Fictional captain who said, "I'd strike the sun if it insulted me"
- Fictional captain who said "Thou damned whale!"
- Fictional captain of the Pequod
- Fictional boss of Stubb and Flask
- Fanatical captain in "Moby-Dick"
- Famously driven captain
- Famous skipper
- Famed whaler
- Early John Barrymore talkie role
- Deranged whaling-ship captain created by Herman Melville
- Demented whaler
- Character with only one leg to stand on?
- Character with a whalebone prosthesis
- Character whose last words are "For hate's sake I spit my last breath at thee."
- Character who says "Wilt thou not chase the white whale?"
- Character who pursues Moby Dick
- Character that was the basis for Captain Hook
- Character called "a grand, ungodly, god-like man"
- Chapter XXVIII of "Moby-Dick"
- Chapter 28 of "Moby-Dick"
- Captain with the "overbearing dignity of some mighty woe"
- Captain with an obsession
- Captain with an ivory leg
- Captain with a whalebone prosthesis
- Captain with a whale-ivory leg
- Captain with a "regal overbearing dignity of some mighty woe"
- Captain whose last words are "Thus, I give up the spear!"
- Captain who says, "For hate's sake I spit my last breath at thee"
- Captain who pursued Moby Dick
- Captain who chased Moby Dick
- Captain played by Patrick Stewart
- Captain once portrayed by Patrick Stewart
- Captain of the "Pequod"
- Captain of Stubb and Flask
- Captain obsessed with a whale in "Moby-Dick"
- Captain obsessed with a whale
- Captain obsessed
- Captain in pursuit of Moby Dick
- Captain in Ishmael's tale.
- Captain in Ishmael's tale
- Captain in "Moby Dick"
- Captain for Stubb and Fedallah
- Captain employed by Peleg and Bildad
- Captain done in by Moby-Dick
- Captain described as a "grand, ungodly, god-like man"
- Captain after a white whale
- Boat captain created by Herman Melville
- Blubbering fool of fiction?
- Beholder of a "hump like a snow-hill"
- 1956 role for Peck
- "Ungodly, god-like" captain of literature
- "Thy hour and thy harpoon are at hand!" speaker
- "Thy hour and thy harpoon are at hand!" crier
- "Pequod" skipper
- "Moby Dick" whaler
- "Moby Dick" captain portrayed by Patrick Stewart in a 1998 miniseries on USA
- "I'll chase him round Good Hope, and round the Horn, and round the Norway Maelstrom" speaker of fiction
- "I'd strike the sun if it insulted me" speaker
- "I drive the sea!" crier
- "Hast seen the White Whale?" asker
- "Grand, ungodly, godlike man," in literature
- "Grand, ungodly, god-like" character of fiction
- "From hell's heart I stab at thee" speaker in "Moby-Dick"
- "For hate's sake I spit my last breath at thee" speaker
- "Enter ___; to Him, Stubb." (29th chapter of "Moby-Dick")
- "And be the white whale agent, or be the white whale principal, I will wreak that hate upon him" speaker of fiction
- "Accursed white whale" pursuer
- "A moody good captain," according to Peleg
- "A grand, ungodly, godlike man" in fiction
- "A brilliant personification of the very essence of fanaticism," per the book "Melville: His World and Work"
- "--- the Arab"
- 'Moby-Dick' mariner
- 'Moby-Dick' helmsman
- 'Moby-Dick' captain
- ''Pequod'' skipper
- ''Pequod'' captain
- ''A grand, ungodly, godlike man''
- ''___ the Arab'' (song)
- ''___ the Arab''
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