Answer: TIS
TIS is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted over 20 times. There are related answers (shown below). Try defining TIS with Google.
Referring crossword puzzle clues
- "___ the season ..."(Used today)
- Poetic contraction
- Scale notes
- Poetic word
- Common contraction
- Quaint contraction
- Musical notes
- Song syllables
- Musical syllables
- Elevator innovator
- "___ the season to be jolly"
- Frank McCourt book
- Carol contraction
- Poet's contraction
- "Deck the Halls" contraction
- '-- the season ...'
- McCourt memoir
- Notes
- Frank McCourt memoir
- Carol opener
- "___ the season . . . "
- "___ the season . . ."
- "My country, ___ of thee ..."
- "__ the season . . ."
- 'My country -- of thee'
- Old-fashioned contraction
- "Angela's Ashes" sequel
- It is, condensed
- Third word of "America"
- Scale syllables
- McCourt book
- "__ the season ..."
- "Yep"
- "Whether ___ nobler ..."
- "My Country, ___ of Thee"
- Opposite of 'tain't
- ' the season ...'
- Poetic contraction.
- Not 'tain't
- Musical tones
- La followers
- Bard's contraction
- "America" contraction
- "___ the season to be jolly ..."
- "__ the season ... "
- Christmas contraction
- "___ the season..."
- "___ better to have loved ..."
- 'Twas in the present?
- Follow-up to "Angela's Ashes"
- "My country, __ of thee"
- "___ the season!"
- '-- folly to be wise'
- "Whether ___ nobler . . ."
- "___ folly to be wise"
- "__ the season to be jolly . . ."
- Verbal contraction
- Sequel to "Angela's Ashes"
- "Indeedy"
- "___ better to have loved and lost . . ."
- Music notes
- 1999 Frank McCourt memoir
- "___ better to have loved and lost ..."
- ... the season to be jolly ('3)
- Shakespearean contraction
- Rejoinder to "'tain't!"
- Quaint agreement
- Frank McCourt sequel
- "Whether __ nobler ...": Hamlet
- "That so?" reply
- "My country, ___ of thee . . ."
- "My country, __ of thee . . ."
- "Angela's Ashes" follow-up
- "'Tain't" rebuttal
- "'___ the season to be jolly"
- "____ the season . . ."
- "___ true"
- "___ a pity"
- "__ better to have loved ...": Tennyson
- "__ a pity"
- '''Tain't'' rebuttal
- '-- the season to be jolly'
- Retort to "T'aint!"
- McCourt title
- Last word of "Angela's Ashes"
- It is abbreviated
- It is (poetic) ('3)
- It comes before the season
- Frank McCourt title
- Brief confirmation
- "My country" follower
- "My country, ___ of thee..."
- "My Country ___ of Thee"
- "My country ___ of thee ..."
- "'___ the season ..."
- "--- the season ..."
- "___ better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all"
- ''My country'' follower
- Yule contraction
- Woody Herman's "___ Autumn"
- The season opener?
- Seasonal contraction
- Quaint affirmation
- Present-tense 'twas
- Poet's it is
- McCourt work
- It's in many poems
- It is, to Tennyson
- It is, poetically
- It is poetically
- Frank McCourt's follow-up to "Angela's Ashes"
- Contraction in Hamlet's soliloquy
- Apt "it's" anagram
- "Whether --- nobler ..."
- "My country, ___ . . . "
- "My country, __ ..."
- "My country __ of thee"
- "My country __ of thee ..."
- "Here ___"
- "Deck the Halls" word
- "Absolutely," for short
- "___ the Voice of the Lobster" (Lewis Carroll poem)
- "___ the season"
- "___ the season to be jolly . . ."
- "___ folly to be wise": Gray
- "___ better to have loved . . ."
- " . . . ___ of thee"
- ''___ the season ...''
- ''___ the season . . .''
- '-- a pity'
- Word that begins with an apostrophe
- Word before "the season to be jolly"
- What precedes the season?
- Verbal contraction.
- Stanza contraction
- Sonneteer's contraction
- Sit back?
- Quaint confirmation
- Preceder of the season
- Poets' word
- Poets' it is
- Musical sevenths
- Lead-in to "the season"
- It's in poetry?
- It's in an old way
- It's in a lot of poetry?
- It's in a carol?
- It's found in poetry?
- It's contracted
- It starts the season
- It is,poetically
- It is, that is
- Contraction in "America"
- Christmas song contraction
- Christmas carol contraction
- Archaic contraction
- Antiquated affirmative
- "Whether ___ nobler in the mind ..." (Hamlet)
- "Whether ___ nobler in the mind ..." ("Hamlet")
- "Whether ___ nobler in the mind . . ."
- "Whether __ nobler ... ": Hamlet
- "T'ain't" retort
- "My country, ___ of . . ."
- "My country, ___ ..."
- "My country ___ . . . "
- "My country __ ..."
- "My country __ ... "
- "Mos def!"
- "Aye"
- "'Taint" comeback
- "___the season . . ."
- "____ the season..."
- "___ the season ... "
- "___ So Sweet to Trust in Jesus" (hymn)
- "___ but a scratch"
- "___ better to have loved . . . "
- "___ Autumn" (Woody Herman hit)
- "___ an old tale, and often told" (Scott)
- "__ the season..."
- "__ the season to be jolly"
- "__ the season to be jolly ..."
- 'Twas today?
- 'My country, -- ...'
- ''My country'' follower, in song
- ''Deck the Halls'' contraction
- ''___ nobler in the mind . . .''
- ''___ in my memory lock'd'' (Ophelia)
- '-- the season!'
- '-- a shame'
- '-- a pity ...'
- ... the season to be jolly
- Yuletide contraction
- Word you pretty much only hear during The Season
- Word that follows "Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la"
- Word repeated in Emily Dickinson's "___ so much joy! ___ so much joy!"
- Word after "My country"
- Word after "la la la la"
- Woody Herman's "'___ Autumn"
- Woody Herman's "--- Autumn"
- Woody Herman's "_____ Autumn"
- Whether ___ nobler ...
- Twas, presently
- True dat, to Shakespeare
- Third word of 'America'
- Third word of ''America''
- Third word of America
- Third word in "America"
- Third word before "to be jolly"
- They come before dos
- Start to the season?
- Start of the season?
- Sole word in the last chapter of "Angela's Ashes"
- Seventh tones
- Sequel to a 1996 Pulitzer memoir
- Scale notes after las
- Quaint "Quite!"
- Present-tense version of 'twas
- Present tense of 'twas
- Polynesian trees
- Polynesian plants
- Poetic verbal contraction.
- Poetic contraction usually at the start of a line
- Poetic "it is"
- Peckish
- Opposite of 't aint
- Old-timey affirmation
- Old-school "Indeed!"
- Notes just above las
- Notes between las and dos
- Notes after las or word sung after "la la la la la la la la"
- Notes after las
- Not counting fas and las, word after "holly"
- Noel contraction
- My country's follower?
- Moore's "_____ the Last Rose of Summer"
- Memoir that preceded "Teacher Man"
- McCourt's sequel to "Angela's Ashes"
- McCourt memoir after "Angela's Ashes"
- Lewis Carroll's "___ the Voice of the Lobster"
- Last word in "Angela's Ashes"
- Las' followers
- Its in poetry
- It's in poetry
- It's in old poems
- It's in much poetry
- It's from the old days
- It's for poets
- It's for Brit Lit class
- It's another way
- It is,to Tennyson
- It is, for short
- It is, to Tennyson
- It is shorter?
- It is fancy?
- It is contracted long ago!
- It is contracted
- It is (poetic)
- It comes before the season?
- Indeed, archaically
- Frank McCourt follow-up
- Follower of "My country"
- Follower of "Angela's Ashes"
- Follow-up to the best seller "Angela's Ashes"
- First word of the song "Simple Gifts"
- First word of a Frank McCourt title
- Diatonic notes
- Deck the Halls contraction
- Country follower
- Contraction seen only during "the season"
- Contraction missing an i
- Contraction in a Christmas song
- Contraction in "Deck the Halls"
- Contracted agreement
- Carol's contraction
- Beginning of "the season to be jolly"
- Archaic agreement
- Archaic "agreed"
- Archaic "Agreed!"
- Apostrophized affirmative
- 1999 memoir that was a bestseller
- 1999 Frank McCourt book
- 1999 best-selling memoir
- “Angela’s Ashes” sequel
- “___ the last rose of summer . . . ”
- "Whether ____ nobler . . ."
- "Whether ___ nobler..."
- "Whether ___ nobler in the mind to suffer...": Hamlet
- "Whether ___ nobler in the mind ...": Hamlet
- "Whether ___ nobler in the mind ..."
- "Whether __ nobler in the mind ...": Hamlet
- "Where ignorance is bliss, ___ folly to be wise"
- "Verily"
- "Verily!"
- "Verily so"
- "True dat," quaintly
- "The season" preceder
- "That's right," quaintly
- "That he is mad, ___ true"
- "Tain't" retort
- "Tain't" rebuttal
- "T'aint!" opposite
- "So true, my old-timey friend!"
- "My country, ____ of thee..."
- "My country, ___ of thee . . . "
- "My country, ___ of . . . "
- "My country, ___ ... "
- "My country, ___ . . ."
- "My country, __ of thee ... "
- "Fa la la la la, la la la la" follower
- "Aye!"
- "Aye, true!"
- "Aye, brother"
- "'Tain't" retort
- "'___ but a scratch"
- "'__ some visitor,' I muttered ... ": Poe
- "...___the season to be jolly"
- "... ___ of thee"
- "... ___ a consummation devoutly to be wish'd": Hamlet
- "... __ an ill cook that cannot lick his own fingers": "Romeo and Juliet"
- ". . . ___ of thee"
- "--- the season to be jolly"
- "_____ the season..."
- "____ a pity"
- "___ well" (George Washington's last words)
- "___ the wind and nothing more!" ("The Raven")
- "___ the wind and nothing more!" ("The Raven" line)
- "___ the Voice of the Lobster" ("Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" poem)
- "___ the season to be ..."
- "___ the season to ..."
- "___ the morrow full of storm" (Neruda poem)
- "___ the mind that makes the body rich": Petruchio
- "___ the last rose of summer" (Thomas Moore poem starter)
- "___ the last rose of summer" (start of a Thomas Moore poem)
- "___ the Last Rose of Summer" (old song standard)
- "___ the last rose of summer"
- "___ the Damn Season" (Taylor Swift song)
- "___ the Damn Season" (2020 Taylor Swift song)
- "___ sweet, adown the shady past, / A lingering look of love to cast": Browning
- "___ So Sweet" (gospel song)
- "___ So Sweet to Trust in Jesus"
- "___ so appalling - it exhilarates": Dickinson
- "___ now the very witching time of night": Hamlet
- "___ not for you to hear what I can speak": "Macbeth"
- "___ my first night beneath the Sun" (Dickinson poem)
- "___ Money Makes a Man" (old English ballad)
- "___ mightiest in the mightiest": Shak.
- "___ midnight, but small thoughts have I of sleep": Coleridge
- "___ Me, O Lord" (spiritual)
- "___ in the breath of heaven...": Keats
- "___ in my memory lock'd": Ophelia
- "___ folly to be wise" (Gray)
- "___ destiny unshunnable, like death": "Othello"
- "___ but a scratch" (Monty Python quote)
- "___ but a scratch" (line from the Black Knight after losing his arm, in "Monty Python and the Holy Grail")
- "___ but a scratch" ("Monty Python" quote)
- "___ but a scratch!"
- "___ but a scratch ..."
- "___ better to have loved..."
- "___ better to be vile than vile esteemed": Shakespeare
- "___ Autumn" (hit 1941 song)
- "___ Autumn" (1941 jazz standard)
- "___ Autumn," 1941 song
- "___ an old tale, and often told": Scott
- "___ almost fairy time": Shak.
- "___ a consummation devoutly to be wished": Hamlet
- "___ a dainty thing to command": Cervantes
- "__ the year's midnight ...": Donne
- "__ the year's midnight ... ": Donne
- "__ the Voice of the Lobster" (poem recited by Alice)
- "__ the season to be ..."
- "__ the season . .."
- "__ the season . . . "
- "__ the gift to be simple ... ": Shaker song
- "__ pleasure, sure, to see one's name in print": Byron
- "__ not so deep as a well": Shak.
- "__ folly to be wise": Gray
- "__ but a scratch"
- "__ better to have loved and lost ... "
- "__ a far, far better thing I do..."
- " . . . to bed; ___ almost fairy time": Shak.
- " . . . ___ folly to be wise"
- 'Whether -- nobler ...'
- 'Twas, in the present tense
- 'My country, -- of thee'
- 'Angela's Ashes' sequel
- 'America' contraction
- ''Whether ___ nobler ...''
- ''My country __ . . .''
- '''Taint'' comeback
- '''Tain't'' retort
- ''... ___ of thee''
- ''___ better to have loved ...''
- ''___ better to have loved . . .''
- ''__ better to have loved . . .''
- '-- the season...'
- ____ Autumn
- ___ better to have loved and lost ...
Likely related crossword puzzle answers
Recent usage in crossword puzzles:
- Universal Crossword - Nov. 21, 2024
- LA Times - Oct. 27, 2024
- WSJ Daily - Oct. 24, 2024
- LA Times - Sept. 29, 2024
- Newsday - Sept. 25, 2024
- Penny Dell - Sept. 20, 2024
- Universal Crossword - Sept. 18, 2024
- Canadiana Crossword - Sept. 16, 2024
- LA Times - Sept. 12, 2024
- Penny Dell - Aug. 22, 2024
- Washington Post Sunday Magazine - Aug. 18, 2024
- Newsday - Aug. 6, 2024
- Universal Crossword - Aug. 2, 2024
- Universal Crossword - July 28, 2024
- LA Times - July 19, 2024
- USA Today - July 12, 2024
- LA Times - July 5, 2024
- LA Times - June 26, 2024
- Newsday - June 23, 2024
- LA Times - June 20, 2024