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Answer for the clue "Boz, really ", 7 letters:
dickens

Alternative clues for the word dickens

Word definitions for dickens in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a word used in exclamations of confusion; "what the devil"; "the deuce with it"; "the dickens you say" [syn: devil , deuce ] English writer whose novels depicted and criticized social injustice (1812-1870) [syn: Charles Dickens , Charles John Huffam ...

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Indeed - what the dickens was the matter with her? - she didn't want to be sensible. ▪ The first is: How the dickens are you getting them in? ▪ What the dickens , so to speak, was he to do?

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Dickens was a 2002 BBC docudrama on the life of the author Charles Dickens . It was presented by Peter Ackroyd , on whose biography of Dickens it was based, and Dickens was played by Anton Lesser . It was broadcast in three hour-long episodes.

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (surname patronymic from=given names) 2 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Dickens, English novelist.

Usage examples of dickens.

Charles Dickens, famed inventor of Christmas ghosts and Tiny Tim, when visiting Rome in 1845 chose to broaden his experience of the world by witnessing the beheading of a criminal.

Although the Dickens desk in it was small, Cullum had to sidle his way around it.

I asked him what in the dickens was he doing this far north at Christmastime with nothing on but ventilated sneaks and kneeless jeans and a Sunset Strip pink pearl-button shirt?

David Lean, Ronald Neame, Anthony Havelock-Allan, Cecil McGivern, Kay Walsh, from the novel by Charles Dickens - Dir.

When he had finally plodded into Padang, ninety minutes ago, after a fruitless search along the river bank for Dickens, he had felt half-dead.

Then I got back to Padang myself as quickly as possible, meeting up with Stobart and Dickens.

Annie had to call back to Dickens, obviously mortified, because Grady was still on the move, still with one thought in mind, that of getting out of Peevers Mansion before he started babbling like the idiot he thought he was.

Dickens, who buttled for a hobby, with grand larceny and art forgery his real vocations.

But let it be granted that Dickens the humourist is foremost and most precious.

Lorry and Miss Pross are shown to be softening under the good influence of Lucie and her family, so that by the third part they are no longer stereotypes of an old England of which Dickens is critical.

Victor Hugo, Mazzini, Dickens, Baudelaire, and Theophile Gautier might have added one to the great generosities of the world.

I asked him what in the dickens was he doing this far north at Christmastime with nothing on but ventilated sneaks and kneeless jeans and a Sunset Strip pink pearl-button shirt?

Of course, Shakespeare had his clowns and Dickens had his Sam Wellers, and in both cases, dialog was used that mangled the English language to some extent--but that was intended as humor.

Chemical substances and commodities, like the conspiracies, and like the dustheaps in Dickens, embody the moral defects of the society that produces them.

Is the fastidious, the impartial, the non-moral novelist only the grandchild, and not the remote posterity, of Dickens, who would not leave Scrooge to his egoism, or Gradgrind to his facts, or Mercy Pecksniff to her absurdity, or Dombey to his pride?