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Red dog in football
Answer for the clue "Red dog in football ", 5 letters:
blitz
Alternative clues for the word blitz
Word definitions for blitz in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Blitz is German industrial rock group KMFDM 's sixteenth studio album, released on March 24, 2009, on KMFDM Records and Metropolis Records . It also marks the first use of five letter song titles and a five letter album title since WWIII . The album charted ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES a media blitz (= when something is deliberately reported or advertised in the media a lot, in a small amount of time ) ▪ The candidate’s media blitz has certainly raised his profile in the election. COLLOCATIONS FROM ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 A sudden attack, especially an air raid; usually with reference to The Blitz. 2 (context figuratively English) A sudden effort. 3 (context American football English) The action of a defensive football player who rushes the passer of the football. 4 ...
Usage examples of blitz.
The calls multiplied, and Blitz found his head swimming in a myriad of details and distractions.
Unlike some of his predecessors, Blitz realized that a rapidly rearming Japan presented a grave danger in Asia.
If the North Koreans tried to go nuclear, Blitz was fairly confident that the threat could be met.
Logically, Blitz realized that this meant America should attack before the North Koreans had a chance to.
President asked Blitz if he thought the North Korean government would collapse soon.
FBI sent the new e-mail directly to Blitz, and he was just reading it when Hunter called to tell him about it.
But even Blitz was starting to worry now about the state of the country he was in.
President told Blitz as they strode downstairs to the White House situation room, actually a suite of rooms with secure links and access to intelligence gathering around the globe.
He smiled in a way that reminded Blitz of their much earlier days, ancient history now, spent discussing geopolitics in the dark days after Vietnam.
Blitz and the President envisioned without the catastrophe that everyone, Blitz included, had feared.
The President stood next to Blitz, going over the most recent bulletins and handing each page back as he did.
President handed Blitz the last page, then checked his hair in a mirror held by one of his aides.
He decided he would call Blitz and leave a message on his voice mail telling him that he had changed his mind and that, if the job was still open at NADT, he wanted it.
Upstairs he found Blitz sitting at his desk amid a variety of papers and reports.
Using the base salary figures that Blitz and the others were throwing around, though, he could easily afford it.