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Like 27 or 29, but not 28
Answer for the clue "Like 27 or 29, but not 28 ", 3 letters:
odd
Alternative clues for the word odd
Word definitions for odd in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Odd , a name of Old Norse origin ( Oddr ), the 11th most common male name in Norway . It is rarely used in other countries, though sometimes appearing in other Nordic countries. In old Norse the word means sharp end of an arrow or edge of blade. Oddur is ...
Usage examples of odd.
American, from his accent, and Eurasian by the odd combination of slanted eyes that were a bright bottle green color.
Sheridan had struck up an acquaintanceship with the actor-murderer Giles, a slightly bizarre eventuality which might have odd consequences.
Battle of North India, in which the entire Anglo-Indian aeronautic settlement establishment fought for three days against overwhelming odds, and was dispersed and destroyed in detail.
Pakistan has been producing and testing, on an experimental basis, a wide range of odd drugs, both amphetamines and narcotics, in pill, liquid, and aerosol form.
In a glass cabinet nearby was an odd black stone, of irregular outline, small enough to lift, but large enough to brain an afrit nicely.
The Diving Officer and bowplanesman were struggling to maintain depth control in spite of the odd effects of their rooster-tail wake aft and the shallow-bottom venturi force amidships.
Josef was heading when he killed him, but the odds were it was Agios Georgios .
I looked back, saw an odd shadow, and was about to say something when Alake pounced on me.
Just then, she remembered the spectacle she had witnessed in a chamber of Udolpho, and, by an odd kind of coincidence, the alarming words, that had accidentally met her eye in the MS.
In spite of the odd hours they kept, Alec found it difficult not to break the habit of rising with the sun.
Grand Dame Alpha, an odd look on her face as she watched Keeli struggle to sit up.
The odds were slightly more in favor of mummified alumnae staggering out of the ritual closet than of police thundering down the stairs, but there was little else to do.
Shapes loomed out of the overcast shadows at Ana, and there was an odd smell in the room.
The anchorite had shown Cale several alphabets, including the odd letters she had said were Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, and Cyrillic, as well as the Asian ideographic systems, but nothing in any of her books had even vaguely resembled these figures.
That seemed odd, since the Anointed himself was so grotesquely fat that the effort of hauling his own weight around left him with little strength for anything else.