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''Cheers'' proprietor
Answer for the clue "''Cheers'' proprietor ", 6 letters:
malone
Alternative clues for the word malone
- Dorothy of "Peyton Place"
- English scholar remembered for his chronology of Shakespeare's plays and his editions of Shakespeare and Dryden (1741-1812)
- Sam who ran the bar on "Cheers"
- NBA great Karl
- Jazz legend Karl
- NBA legend Karl
- Longtime TV role for Danson
- Danson, on ''Cheers''
- Family name in a classic Irish ballad
- Moses or Karl of basketball
Usage examples of malone.
Malone used to fancy he heard terrible cracked bass notes from a hidden organ far underground when the church stood empty and unlighted, whilst all observers dreaded the shrieking and drumming which accompanied the visible services.
Murder, he said, was a crossword puzzle, and he was addicted to puzzles, he also said, though neither Malone nor Clements had ever seen him indulging his addiction.
An outsider witnessing the moment would have assumed that Malone and Clements were the hosts and the two lawyers the guests.
He pulled up when he saw Malone and Clements, stood stockstill with the two big suitcases almost pulling his arms out of their sockets.
Malone and Clements, in suits and hats and ties, not a muscle in sight, looked like drop-ins from another planet.
Her back was to Malone and Clements and she remained like that a moment.
Malone was just glad that Russ Clements was off-duty and for the first time he could recall he looked at Kagal with suspicion.
Immediately in front of Malone and Clements sat a wino with a full bottle of plonk in one hand and a mobile phone in the other: the economy had indeed turned the corner, if seeing was believing.
Once inside they separated, Malone going right off the main lobby, Clements turning left.
Then Malone rang Russ Clements, who, half-asleep but still awake enough to be concerned for the Malone family, said only, 'Lisa and the kids all right?
And a debt of friendship to poor old hopeless George Woodard, and to Conyers and Erik, and to the memory of that silly ass Pat Malone, who might have made it if he'd lived.
Malone felt a certain grim satisfaction in observing that the newspapermen had evidently also had a little trouble with the songs of the early birds.
He believed law and order was the eleventh commandment and, Malone was sure, would have issued a warrant against Jesus Christ, then gone to church on Sunday.
I knew the federales were going to get involved, I wasn’t surprised when I saw that woman Malone in the paper, but we all know that Gene isn’t quite right.
He just had to hang tough and take whatever nastiness Malone was preparing to hand out.