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Answer for the clue "Classic cop show with Joe Friday ", 7 letters:
dragnet

Alternative clues for the word dragnet

Word definitions for dragnet in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
" Dragnet " is an instrumental theme from the radio and television show of the same name . It was composed by Walter Schumann for the radio show, and was also used on the subsequent television series and later syndication of the TV series under the name ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Old English drægnet , a net to drag the bottom of a body of water in fishing; see drag (v.) + net (n.). Figurative use is from 1640s; police sense attested by 1894.

Usage examples of dragnet.

Though the process might be delayed, eventually the dragnet would close in an effort to ensnare the missing slayer: Shakes Niefan.

He sold everything: the house, the business, the fishing boats, the outboard motors, the dragnets, the smokehouses, and the store with its pulleys, tool boxes, and variously smelling miscellaneous wares.

Hostility toward the Deryni Ansel increased dramatically after the receipt of his letter, and several members of the Council even suggested that the Ramos Statutes should be tightened even more and dragnets put out to find the impudent Ansel and finish him, once and for all.

For once, she was happy for the nightly dragnets that sought to evict her from the city.

From everything she'd told him, Kehrsyn had been through many such dragnets before, and, since she still possessed both hands, evidence implied that she'd always escaped clean.

Just months after the September 11 terrorist attacks, the ACLU printed and distributed a pamphlet in seven languages telling men how to legally avoid answering police who are conducting dragnets for individuals who may be in the country to disperse nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons.

I don't know how you two slip in and out of dragnets and things so easily, but for me this is a dangerous place.

Each evening, chores done -- choke-oiling the decks, tightening the standing rigging yet again to take in a few centimeters slack (mostly, I think, a figment of Soterio's imagination), and spreading dragnets to catch samples (the ocean here was barren and the nets came up empty) -- the crew not on night watch ate cold freechunk and dried fruit and drank mat fiber beer in the mess, then lay out on the deck as they had the day before, as they might the next day and for a thousand years after.

He grinned, hearing in his mind the first nine notes of the Dragnet theme song.