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Geisha's cooler
Answer for the clue "Geisha's cooler ", 3 letters:
fan
Alternative clues for the word fan
Word definitions for fan in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
late Old English fannian "to winnow (grain)," from the noun (see fan (n.1)). Meaning "to stir up air" is from early 15c. Baseball sense of "strike out (a batter)" is by 1909. Related: Fanned ; fanning . To fan out "spread out like a hand-held fan," is from ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
" Fan " is a 2003 song recorded by French singer and composer Pascal Obispo . Written by Lionel Florence who had previously worked for many notable artists, the song is a tribute to great artists, particularly Michel Polnareff . Released on March 14, 2003, ...
Usage examples of fan.
The reply of those who opposed the adjournment was that the condition of public affairs did actually tend to revolution, and that instead of fanning the popular excitement by remaining in session, Congress would be thus most wisely allaying the fears which had entered the minds of so large a number of the people.
No adzes made of the local tridacna shell, such as were used on most inhabited atolls, were found on Fanning.
Who, soothed to false repose by the fanning plumes above And the music-stirring motion of its soft and busy feet, Dream visions of aereal joy, and call the monster, Love, And wake, and find the shadow Pain, as he whom now we greet.
With a howl from the fan room aft, the huge displacement blower began blowing the ballast tanks dry.
If aw fan misen teed to a thing, At could work, ait an live, withaat brains.
While they waited for permission, Alameda reached for her coverall zipper and pulled it down a few inches and fanned her face.
Rather than stay with the simple pop-music formula of their early work, the period of Beatlemania, they pushed the boundaries of their music, making each album more complex than the one before, although never enough to alienate the fans.
The Beatles, or the White Album as fans usually call it, was eagerly awaited: how could they top Sgt.
An amine solution pump came on, a vent fan winding up in the space, whirring quietly in the otherwise church like quiet.
I had worn during our visit to the Ancestress, and the silver belt with the jade trim and the gold-spattered fan.
Fan, there was no way we had the stamina or physical aptitude to carry on.
There was no question of his plane having been engulfed: in those initial stages, according to observers, there had been only an inch or two ofwater fanning out over the airfield but that had been enough to make the Fokker aquaplane with disastrous results.
But despite the glow of a thousand candles and Argand lamps, he saw nothing but flashes of fans and trains and white slippers.
He minced off giving the menu a flap as if to fan his face, and I followed him, back towards the car-park, then through a timber back-door and into a functional corridor.
When removed from the mould, garnish with chopped aspic and fans cut from gherkins and lettuce.