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Answer for the clue "Rail bird's cry to his horse ", 6 letters:
faster

Alternative clues for the word faster

Word definitions for faster in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Faster is a 2010 American action film directed by George Tillman, Jr. , and starring Dwayne Johnson and Billy Bob Thornton . The film was released in the United States on November 24, 2010.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"one who fasts," c.1300, agent noun from fast (v.).

Usage examples of faster.

She and her colleagues were throwing fireballs at a faster and faster pace.

The amount of energy demanded by a starship to fly faster than light sliced down through the atmosphere in a beam that was no more than a hundred meters wide when it struck the surface.

They had traveled further and faster than anyone else in the Ring Empire.

There was an experienced sailor in charge of the other diving team who could have made a faster trip.

But it was certainly traveling a lot faster than the jeeps had managed along the same stretch of road.

My mount was slightly faster, and I cut in from his blind side, and slashed, backhanding the ball away from him toward his goal.

I began kneading my hands, and her breath came faster and I felt her nipples rise, even through my costume.

It swirled faster and faster, moving in concentric circles toward the center, and my eyes were drawn to the skull.

His throat was vibrating faster than a throat could, and sweat was pouring down his face, and something extraordinary was happening.

The inner light began to pulse faster and faster and the stone began to shake.

Christiaan Huygens, creator of the pendulum clock, at first refused to believe reports that a pendulum would swing faster in winter.

Liquor and cigarettes entered human life as time-savers, delivering their chemical effects far faster than wine and pipes had done.

These two men, corresponding, quickly realized how many everyday actions had secrets to reveal, once technology let them see faster than could the naked eye.

Anyway, Detroit had no choice: customer tastes were changing faster and faster.

When everyone adopted overnight mail, equality was restored, and only the universally faster pace remained.