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Perhaps love conditions in which Ben Fogle's heading off again?
Answer for the clue "Perhaps love conditions in which Ben Fogle's heading off again? ", 7 letters:
travers
Alternative clues for the word travers
Word definitions for travers in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Travers may refer to: Travers (surname) , a list of real and fictional people with this surname Travers, or haunches-in , a movement in dressage Travers, Alberta , a hamlet in Alberta, Canada Travers, Switzerland , a village in the canton of Neuchâtel, ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Travers \Trav"ers\, adv. [F. travers, breadth, extent from side, [`a] travers, en travers, de travers, across, athwart. See Traverse , a.] Across; athwart. [Obs.] The earl . . . caused . . . high trees to be hewn down, and laid travers one over another. ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
adv. (context obsolete English) across; athwart
Usage examples of travers.
Helen fetched Miss Travers, and the schoolteacher lifted Sophie to her feet.
Her words made Sophie remember how attached Helen had been to Miss Travers even at Fort Martin.
May, it only makes the situation worse to talk about Amy Travers in front of him.
I told Miss Travers that story, Sally laughed, and so Miss Travers sent her from the room.
She pulled the curtain, closing herself in, then reread the passage Amy Travers had marked off.
Miss Travers was a tall woman, changed little in the many years since Sophie had last seen her.
Miss Travers put her hand out, and when Sophie took it, she was surprised at its heavy softness.
Sophie saw the schoolteacher looking at her waved hair, her light blue gown, and she realized Miss Travers was seeking evidence of frivolity.
But all the while, her thoughts were on Helen and how close Miss Travers and Helen had been.
For a moment Miss Travers had seemed close to telling Sophie something, but now she was slipping neatly out of her questions.
Miss Travers drove out of Cheyenne, and as the town grew small in the distance, Sophie realized this was the first time in many years she had been out on the prairie in anything but a train.
After nearly two hours, Miss Travers pointed out a shape on the horizon.
Miss Travers slowed to cross the small creek, then urged the old roan on for the last two or three hundred yards, stopping abruptly when she came to the first of the rectangular buildings, a wooden shack with the windows broken out.
Sophie rushed on into the shack and found Miss Travers kneeling beside a prostrate figure, a woman incongruously dressed in red, who was sprawled near a hole in the middle of the shack floor.
When Sophie rushed back in, Miss Travers was holding a hoe with a long wooden handle.