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Answer for the clue "Voted as directed, supporting three political leaders ", 6 letters:
polled

Alternative clues for the word polled

Word definitions for polled in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Poll \Poll\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Polled ; p. pr. & vb. n. Polling .] To remove the poll or head of; hence, to remove the top or end of; to clip; to lop; to shear; as, to poll the head; to poll a tree. When he [Absalom] pollled his head. --2 Sam. xiv. 26. ...

Usage examples of polled.

By June of 1973 a Gallup poll showed 67 percent of those polled thought Nixon was involved in the Watergate break-in or lied to cover up.

Vietnam war, only 20 percent of Americans polled thought the collapse of the Saigon government was a threat to United States security.

National Opinion Research Center found that only 12 percent of those it polled thought too much was being spent on arms.

In one survey that showed 5 3 percent of the veterans polled saying they would gladly serve in the Gulf War, 37 percent said they would not.

In that month, when people being polled were reminded of the huge costs of the war, only 17 percent said the war was not worth it.

Longwell polled conservative kids in 2003 and got results similar to mine.

You see, something like eight percent of the people polled who said they were going to vote for Calhoun said they were voting for him only because they thought I was gay.

Kienthaliens demanding the adhesion of French Socialists to the Internationale at Moscow, under the leadership of Premier Lenin of the Bolshevist government polled only 270 votes.

In state elections from Massachusetts to Kansas the Greenback and labor candidates polled from 5 to 15 per cent of the total vote, and in most cases the Greenback vote would probably have been much greater had not one or the other, and in some cases both, of the old parties incorporated part of the Greenback demands in their platforms.

Lloyd Stanhope popped up by512 Diana Gabaldonmy elbow, looking like a very animated boiled egg in his nightshirt, his polled head startlingly round and pale without his wig.

She had once stood for the Borough Council as an anti-fluoride candidate and polled fifty-eight votes.

Oi polled ye many but my fews were chousen (Voter, voter, early voter, he was never too oft for old Sarum): terminals four my staties were, the Geenar, the Greasouwea, the Debwickweck, the Mifgreawis.