Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Odysseus' smart dog ", 5 letters:
argos

Alternative clues for the word argos

Word definitions for argos in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Advanced Rayleigh Guided Ground Layer Adaptive Optics System (ARGOS) is a multi-star adaptive optics system which is built for use with the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). With ARGOS, both sides of the LBT will be equipped with a multi-laser beacon system ...

Usage examples of argos.

They left the organization and took their pick of jobs elsewhere—often with Argos clients.

Manners were deferential, even in cases where the Argos representative was offered rudeness in return.

The design on the brooch was the Argos Group emblem, a blue-green globe gripped by a scarlet talon.

Gordy Rolfe was Maddy Wheatstone's boss, an electronics wizard of legendary reputation who was also the founder and head of the Argos Group.

Without the asteroid, the shield schedule is a mess and Argos carries part of the blame for delay.

More than six months ago the Argos Group had requested a license to construct a launch facility off the southern tip of Florida.

She was promising that Argos would get their license—as soon as the space shield project was back on schedule.

She remembered the history of the Argos Group, and she finished weakly, "—my entire Cabinet.

She was also, according to the Argos Group information services, his longtime mistress.

Her meeting was with Bruno Colombo alone, and her main task was to persuade the director that Hyslop should be made available to assist the Argos Group in the asteroid capture program.

She had watched it happen many times during her nine years with the Argos Group, as that organization burgeoned from its original role as a provider of unique electronics to a worldwide deal broker and powerhouse.

The Argos Group wasn't government, but Gordy Rolfe claimed, at least internally, that it was more powerful than any government.

The Aten class of asteroids all have orbits that cross the orbit of Earth, and the Argos Group has during the past eight years contracted with Sky City for the transfer of two of them from their original paths to stable near-Earth orbits.

The central question for the Argos Group remains: Can we rely on Sky City to deliver the third asteroid as required, or will we be forced to examine other alternatives?

We have to get to know each other, and there are sensitive matters of Argos Group activities that cannot involve you.