Answer: OPE
OPE is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted over 20 times. There are related answers (shown below). Try defining OPE with Google.
Referring crossword puzzle clues
- Poetic word
- "In your dreams!"
- Unlock, poetically
- Unlock, in verse
- Poet's ajar
- Uncork, to Keats
- Unseal
- Reveal, in verse
- Unlock, to a bard
- Ajar, to Keats
- Reveal, poetically
- Ajar, to bards
- Unclose, poetically
- Shakespearean verb
- Ajar, in poems
- Unlock, in poetry
- Unclose, in verse
- Unclose, in poems
- Unlatch, in poems
- Ajar, in verse
- Ajar, in poetry
- Unlock, to a poet
- Uncover, poetically
- Unbarred, to a bard
- Not shut, in odes
- Unlock, to poets
- Unlatched, in verse
- Unclose, to Shakespeare
- Unclose, to poets
- Begin, in poetry
- Ajar, to a bard
- Reveal, in poetry
- Open, poetically
- Not shut, poetically
- Expose, in verse
- Unshut, poetically
- Unseal, poetically
- Unlatch
- Unfasten, poetically
- Unfasten, in verse
- Unclose, to a poet
- Agape, to a bard
- "'I __ you liked your drink,' sez Gunga Din"
- Unfold, poetically
- Unfold, in verse
- Unclose, to the Bard
- Reveal, to a poet
- Poetic verb
- Expose, poetically
- Begin, poetically
- "Earth still holds __ her gate": Thomas Nashe
- Unveil, to a bard
- Unveil, in poetry
- Unveil, in poems
- Unseal, to Shakespeare
- Unlock, to Keats
- Unlock, to bards
- Unlock, in poems
- Unlatch, poetically
- Uncover, in verse
- Unclose
- Poetic start
- Poetic open
- Not shut, in verse
- Not closed, poetically
- Begin, to poets
- Ajar, poetically
- "O Henry, ___ thine eyes!" (Shakespeare)
- "...heaven shall ___ her portals": Byron
- "... thus wide I'll __ my arms": "Hamlet"
- What blossoms do, in poetry
- Unwrap, in verse
- Unveil, to an odist
- Unstop, poetically
- Unseal, in Shakespeare
- Unlock'd
- Unlock, to Shakespeare
- Unlock, to Byron
- Unlock, in a sonnet
- Unlatch, in verse
- Unclose, to Keats
- Unclose, to Byron
- Unclose, in poesy
- Unbar, to the Bard
- Reveal, in poems
- Reveal in a poem?
- Not seal'd
- Expose in verse?
- Dream, with a Cockney accent
- Cockney aspiration?
- Agape, in poems
- "Wilt thou not __ thy heart . . .?": Emerson
- "To ___ their golden eyes": Shak.
- "O Henry, ___ thine eyes!": Shak.
- "And when I ___ my lips . . . ": Shak.
- Word for and in Pope
- What flowers do, in poetry
- Use a poet's corkscrew?
- Unwrap, poetically
- Unveiled, in verse
- Unveil, poetically
- Unveil, in verse
- Untie, to Keats
- Unsealed, in poesy
- Unseal: Poetic
- Unseal: Poet.
- Unseal, in verse
- Unseal, in poetry
- Unlock, to some poets
- Unlock, to Locke
- Unlatch, to bards
- Unlatch, in an ode
- Unfurl, to a poet
- Unfold: Poet.
- Unfold, to poets
- Unfold, in poetry
- Unfold, in poesy
- Unfasten, to a poet
- Uncover, to a bard
- Uncover in a poem
- Uncork, to Falstaff
- Unclosed in verse
- Unclose.
- Unclose: Poetic
- Unclose, to W.S.
- Unclose, to Shelley
- Unclose, to Marlowe
- Unclose, to Donne
- Unclose, to Coleridge
- Unclose, to a bard
- Unclose, in poetry
- Unbolt, poetically
- Unbar, to Keats
- Unbar, to Byron
- Take the lid off, in poesy
- Surprised Midwestern interjection
- Start, poetically
- Revealed, in verse
- Reveal, to a bard
- Reveal poetically
- Poets' open
- Poetically unlatch
- Poetically part, as lips
- Poetically disclose
- Poetically ajar
- Poetic unclose
- Poet's start
- Poet's "unclose."
- Optimism, in Soho
- Opposite of close, in poetry
- Open(poetic)
- Open, to Shelley or Keats
- Open, to Pope
- Open, to poet Pope
- Open, to Ovid
- Open, to Emerson
- Open, to Christopher Marlowe
- Open (poetic)
- Not shut, to Shelley
- Not shut, in poetry
- Not closed, in verse
- Not closed, in poetry
- Midwestern word often said before "'Scuse me!"
- Midwestern exclamation of surprise
- Mayberry lad, sometimes
- Mayberry kid, familiarly
- Let a breeze in, in poetry
- Lay bare, to the Bard
- Hoptimism
- High expectation for Eliza?
- Go from bud to blossom, to a poet
- Expose, to poets
- Expose, in poesy
- Expos'd
- East Ender's wish
- Disclose, to Shelley
- Disclose, to Donne
- Disclose, poetically
- Disclose in verse
- Cockney's wishful thinking.
- Cockney's wish?
- Cockney's wish
- Cockney's desire.
- Cockney's desire
- Cockney's aspiration
- Cockney anticipation?
- Central concept to the Obama election, to a Cockney British person
- Byron's untie
- Break into, quaintly
- Begin, in verse
- Begin, in poesy
- Bard's ajar
- Bard's "unseal"
- And when I ___ my lips ...: Shak.
- Ajar, to Pope
- Agape, to bards
- Agape, poetically
- "Yet that thy brazen gates of heaven may ___": Shak.
- "Wilt thou not ___ thy heart...?": Emerson
- "Wide I'll ___ my arms": "Hamlet"
- "Why should I ___ thy melancholy eyes?": Keats, "Hyperion"
- "Which, like dumb mouths, do ___ their ruby lips" ("Julius Caesar")
- "When I ___ my lips, let no dog bark."
- "To his good friends thus wide I'll ___ my arms": Laertes
- "To his good friends thus wide I'll ___ my arms": "Hamlet"
- "To ___ their golden eyes": Shakespeare
- "The very minute bids thee ___ thine ear": Shak.
- "Set ___ the doors, O soul!": Whitman
- "Set __ the doors O soul": Whitman
- "O the cannons ___ their rosy-flashing muzzles!": Whitman
- "O Henry, --- thine eyes!" (Shakespeare)
- "Morn did ___ / Its pale eyes then ...": Shelley
- "I am Sir Oracle / And when I __ my lips, let no dog bark!" (Shakespeare)
- "Ere Heaven shall ___ her portals ...": Byron
- "Behold, the heavens do ___": Shak.
- "Behold, the heavens do ___": "Coriolanus"
- "And when I ___ my lips . . . " : Shak.
- "Adam, now ___ thine eyes": "Paradise Lost"
- "'I ___ you liked your drink,' sez Gunga Din"
- "'And when I __ my lips let no dog bark!'": "The Merchant of Venice"
- "...wide I'll ___ my arms": "Hamlet"
- ''To ___ their golden eyes'' (Shakespeare)
- ``To ___ their golden eyes:'' Shakespeare
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