Category: Wall Street Journal Crossword Answers
| Page 470 of 2133 | Crossword Answers 911

Wall Street Journal Crossword Answers -18-April-2024
Wall Street Journal Crossword Answers -17-April-2024
Wall Street Journal Crossword Answers -16-April-2024
  1. 1.Awkward thing to be put on
  2. 2."Isn't it funny how a bear likes honey?” writer
  3. 3.Joint beneficiary?
  4. 4.With not much margin
  5. 5.Macabre Van Gogh gift
  6. 6.Fix, as brakes
  7. 7."That's your opinion?”
  8. 8.Taking things the wrong way
  9. 9.Org. whose logo is interlocking rings
  10. 10.Art backer?
  11. 11.Pindar poem
  12. 12.Red Heart and Fire are among the most used
  13. 13.Watering hole
  14. 14.Continuous power, found in continuous strings in rows 1, 5, 11 and 15
  15. 15.Band member, often
  16. 16.Unified
  17. 17.Dissents
  18. 18.Women, to film noir gumshoes
  19. 19.___ nécessaire (necessary evil)
  20. 20.Lose-lose
  21. 21.Pedigree holder, perhaps
  22. 22."Crystal Castles” producer
  23. 23.Cedar Rapids campus
  24. 24.A target of the MMR vaccine
  25. 25.Major option for med students
  26. 26.Like many fingers
  27. 27.German trio asking you to "Evacuate the Dancefloor”
  28. 28.Prix fixe offering
  29. 29.Become brighter
  30. 30.Auto shop inits.
  31. 31.Warm meal in Hanoi
  32. 32.Court-ordered service?
  33. 33.Showing shock, perhaps
  34. 34.Get the word out
  35. 35.Gruff
  36. 36.Since Jan. 1
  37. 37.Balm bit
  38. 38.Tropicana Field player
  39. 39.Astrologer Sydney
  40. 40.Wreath decor
  41. 41.Wasn't on the level
  42. 42.Bonkers
  43. 43.Raising a red flag, relationship-wise
  44. 44.Stratum
  45. 45.The range, to the deer and the antelope
  46. 46.Picture on a desktop
  47. 47.Fibrous breakfast
  48. 48.Did some prying
  49. 49.Sailor's direction
  50. 50."The Crucible” setting
  51. 51.Source of some current events?
  52. 52.___ Jima
  53. 53.Genetic code molecule
  54. 54.Company whose logo is interlocking rings
  55. 55.Longtime Cowboys quarterback Tony
  56. 56.Savor some jerky
  57. 57.Cry
  58. 58.The great outdoors
  59. 59.How money may be lost
  60. 60.Gregarious
  61. 61.Rice and potatoes, e.g.
  62. 62."An Ideal Husband” playwright
  63. 63.V component
  64. 64."Hush, Hush” writer Fitzpatrick
  65. 65.Dawson in the Football Hall of Fame
  66. 66.Soccer's Freddy
  67. 67.Add to a chain, sneakily
  68. 68.Sarcastic laugh sound
  69. 69.End of a professorial address
  70. 70.Do some plotting
  71. 71.Avid enthusiast
  72. 72.Alerts from HQ
  73. 73.Journal unit
  74. 74.Press
  75. 75.Show some grit
  76. 76.Princess Charlotte, to Harry
  77. 77.Course cry
  78. 78.Perfumery container
  79. 79.Spitball sound
  80. 80.Shortstop's service animal?
  81. 81.Subs for
  82. 82.Bordeaux bud
  83. 83.Dish with rice noodles
  84. 84.Isn't anymore, maybe
  85. 85.Scrap
  86. 86.Comet feature
  87. 87.Soldier's service animal?
  88. 88.Métier
  89. 89.It may be fine
  90. 90.Takes in
  91. 91.Pugilist's service animal?
  92. 92.Not so skimpy
  93. 93.Drone stabilizer
  94. 94.Fam member
  95. 95.Worker in a garden
  96. 96.Grandiloquence
  97. 97.Grave marker?
  98. 98.Writer's service animal?
  99. 99."April is the cruellest month” poet
  100. 100.James's co-star on "The Sopranos”
  101. 101.Produkt von Löwenbräu
  102. 102.Dull, in a way
  103. 103.Feature of many a Monet painting
  104. 104.Career
  105. 105.Jacket choice
  106. 106.Finish off, as a dragon
  107. 107.Quartet voice
  108. 108.Sound of merriment
  109. 109.1805 symphony later "retouched” by Mahler
  110. 110.Wetlands waders
  111. 111.Hull stabilizers
  112. 112.Schwab worker
  113. 113.Grimace inducer
  114. 114.Flex, in modern slang
  115. 115.Edmund Pettus Bridge location
  116. 116.Subsequent
  117. 117.Quick drinks
  118. 118."Studio One” episode, e.g.
  119. 119.Peacock ancestor, in a sense
  120. 120.Up to this point
  121. 121.Cloud stuff
  122. 122.Major frankincense exporter
  123. 123.Present
  124. 124.Lode bearing
  125. 125."Beat it!”
  126. 126.Tepid response
  127. 127.You, in many a hymn
  128. 128.Send off
  129. 129.Humble response
  130. 130.Scheme of Gray's "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”
  131. 131.Stadio Olimpico city
  132. 132.Push through
  133. 133.Undid
  134. 134.Five-time U.S. Open champ
  135. 135.1979 #1 hit for the Bee Gees
  136. 136.Nessie's home
  137. 137.Published in installments
  138. 138.51-Across, for one
  139. 139.AirPods effect
  140. 140.Choreography, essentially
  141. 141.Creature on the mask of Tutankhamen
  142. 142.Mechanical process
  143. 143.Esteemed figure
  144. 144.NPR's Totenberg
  145. 145.Defib expert
  146. 146.Bar focus
  147. 147.Runs smoothly
  148. 148."Sure, I'm game”
  149. 149.Trading center
  150. 150.RBI, OBP and SLG, e.g.

First 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 ......Last 

About Wall Street Journal Crosswords

The crosswords at WSJ are cryptic and mostly written personally by Mike or by the infamous anonymous or pseudonym crossword constructors. These puzzles are then carefully analysed by Mike to ensure that that the puzzles are cryptic, adventurous, accurate and addictive for the Wall Street Journal crossword fans.
The Friday WSJ crossword features a contest for all puzzle lovers to solve (a puzzle within a puzzle which is usually a single word such as country name, movie title, a phrase, etc.).
The Saturday crossword is usually a large crossword, apt for the weekend along with another additional speciality word puzzle that is mostly created from assorted cryptics and puzzles by master crossword and puzzle creators from the country such as Emily Cox, Patrick Berry, Henry Rathvon and also Mike Shenk.
Apart from these basic crossword puzzle, you will also find the Varsity Math weekly puzzle that is constructed by the National Museum of Mathematics for all WSJ crossword fans. The daily WSJ crossword puzzle answers are provided right next to the next day’s puzzle.
The Varsity Math puzzle’s answer is published the following week. However, certain answers to puzzles are delayed as they may be a part of relay puzzle, where the answer of one puzzle helps solve another week’s puzzle.

Wall Street Journal Crossword Contests

The WSJ crossword contests are intended only for participants residing in United States. Each Friday, the WSJ includes a special Friday crossword puzzle with a complete grid that reveals clues for the players to solve the weekly question or problem. The weekly question is posed along with the Week’s Friday puzzle.
The Wall Street Journal Crossword answers should be mailed to the WSJ crossword contest team by midnight on Sunday.
The contest limits one entry per person per email-id. Participants who are 18 years and older and are legal residents of United States are eligible to participate in the contest. However, employees and their immediate family members who are associated to the sponsors, the newspaper, the creators, affiliates, subsidiaries, prize suppliers or promotion agencies are not eligible for the contest.
Sponsors choose one random winner from all eligible entries who have correctly answered the Weekly Question. The winners are contacted by WSJ via their provided email address and will receive their prize through the mailing address provided by the winner.
WSJ Puzzle Authors: Mike Shenk, Henry Rathvon, Patrick Berry and Emily cox.


Wall Street Journal crossword answers

At “Crossword Answers 911” website we are working 24 hours a day for the crossword community so everyone can get WSJ crossword answers & solution every day!
Visit us in the future to get more solutions!