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Answer for the clue "Diana's protector in a '78 film ", 4 letters:
lena

Alternative clues for the word lena

Usage examples of lena.

Called Yakutsk, it was near the left bank of the Lena River and had been home to over one hundred thousand people.

On the way home Qwilleran thought about Lena Inchpot and George Breze.

Pippi De Lena has a heart, Cross has a chickenshit heart, my mother has a broken heart.

Lena slid a bowl of oatmeal topped with apple sauce in front of her.

Lena made an eye tunnel in the sheet and looked out at Tucker Case, who was getting out of bed, totally unself-conscious, totally naked, his unit leading him into the bathroom, waving before him like a divining rod.

Did Euphonia lend it to him on the strength of her affection for Lena?

It's my contention that Euphonia paid a farm family to take Lethe and change her name to Lena Foote.

Emily and Lena turned to face the painted fire curtain, a minor masterpiece of restoration carried out by Dazz in accordance with Wurlitzer's explicitly detailed instructions: a Nile scene, as before, but richer in detail, more robust in execution, its vivid colors vibrant and shimmering in the refracted light.

Unseen and incomprehending, Lena arose and moved toward Covenant, one hand stretched out as if to soothe the violence knotted in his back.

She grinned at Sara, noticing that her bodyguard didn’t hear what she’d said because he was too busy lusting after Lena.

Living alone in his tiny rented flat, he seems lost between two lives, the old one with my mother as a family man and the new one with Lena as a born-again mister lover-lover.

When Mirelle wasn't lending Lena Overby a hand with cooking or cleaning, she sketched every aspect of the valley ranch and all its inhabitants, fowl, equine, bovine, canine and human.

Her best friend, Lena Guthrie, one of the only three people to whom she had shown the paper that had been pinned to the blanket, the other two being the doctor and the lawyer, thought the baby looked like Dick, but she, Lucy, was reserving her opinion.

For example, Faulkner's description of the tiny hamlet of Doane's Mill sheds light on Lena Grove, especially when you realize that Doane's Mill was the biggest town this simple country girl had seen before she began her journey to Jefferson.

He was alone in the loading shed, making his steady and interminable journeys between the shed and the car, with a piece of folded tow sack upon his shoulder for a pad and bearing upon the pad stacked burdens of staves which another would have said he cold not raise nor carry, when Lena Grove walked into the door behind him, her face already shaped with serene anticipatory smiling, her mouth already shaped upon a name.