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Answer for the clue "They may be cells ", 6 letters:
phones

Alternative clues for the word phones

Usage examples of phones.

Those pendejos he wasforced to work withl In the code book was a phrase that would have answered the question, and he had warned all of them, over and over, that on nidio phones anyone could be listening.

All I had to do now was listen to their conversations while they were in their room, and to make that happen I went to the bank of pay phones in the lobby and dialed the Firm.

A gang of six or seven of them hung back and headed for the phones, laughing and shouting in newly broken voices, all trying to cram into the one vacant booth.

There were the obvious businessmen chatting on cell phones while they waited for their bags.

They went secure on the phones and Carrothers told him what Mason had reported and that he, Carrothers, was on his way in to the Pentagon.

There were no phones or televisions in the cabins, and the nearest grocery store was in Graniteville, about eight miles farther up into the mountains.

At the command post the hotline phones had been ringing off the hooks-mostly calls from concerned citizens wanting to check up on the progress of the search or express their fears and anger about the abduction.

I expect the hotline phones to light up like Christmas trees in another hour or so.

It seemed as if half the phones in the valley were either out of order altogether, or were dogged with crazy beeps and buzzes.

He was convinced that his phones were being tapped and some enormous conspiracy was underway.

The bastard must have killed the phones while he was waiting for them.

He had originally parked one block away on his own street and phoned both phones in the houses to see what would happen, but there had been no reaction--no lights, no machines, no nothing.

Newman noticed that the phones chirped instead of ringing, and that everyone had a computer console in a small carrel.

The technicians began to unload the equipment and carry the components into the suite: computer terminals, a secure fax machine, encryption equipment, secure phones, and radio repeaters.

Robertson, the Air Force officer detailed to the Special Projects Office, would stay in Washington and monitor the satellite phones at the OEOB and, at least theoretically, send help if needed.