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Crocker of cake mixes
Answer for the clue "Crocker of cake mixes ", 5 letters:
betty
Alternative clues for the word betty
Word definitions for betty in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Betty is a Canadian comic strip written by Gary Delainey and drawn by Gerry Rasmussen. The comic is distributed by United Features Syndicate.
Usage examples of betty.
Betty Barnard had not said anything as to her plans and no one had noticed her in Bexhill during the course of the evening.
The vague descriptions of men said to have been seen with Betty Barnard proved useless.
Betty ordered an Absolut on the rocks with a twist from the young, round-faced bartender, then she suggested that I join her.
Five minutes later, when he came out with the pony saddled and bridled, he found that Betty and Malcolm had gone.
Joe Mansell followed his host to this apartment, a severe room looking out onto the shrubbery at the side of the house, and remarked that having Betty and the children staying at the Cedars brought quite a lot of life into the place.
They laughed and joked, and when supper was over, the dishes washed, and the lamps lighted, they gathered in the old-fashioned parlor, and Betty played on a melodeon that gave forth rather doleful sounds.
Betty, as Mollie successfully made a turn into another highway, off the main one.
I told how Mollie, Betty, Amy and Grace, four girls of Deepdale, a town in the heart of New York State, organized a little club for camping and tramping.
Betty Nelson was the daughter of a wealthy carpet manufacturer, with a large plant near Deepdale, while Mollie Billette was one of three children, her mother being a widow.
True to her determination, Mollie insisted on Betty, Amy and Grace taking at least a few lessons.
Betty of Mollie one day, as they were returning from a short run, Betty at the wheel.
Betty and Mollie seemed interested, for they were born leaders, Betty especially.
Betty of Mollie, beside whom she rode on the front seat, the boys and other girls being in the tonneau.
I shopped all day, discovering a wide array of fashion boutiques: Amanda Wakeley and Betty Jackson on Fulham Road, Browns on South Molton Street, Caroline Charles on Beauchamp Place, Joseph on Old Bond Street, and Nicole Farhi on New Bond Street.
The Nancy and Betty Sherman of the story told there were Nancy and Betsy Penman, daughters of a United Empire Loyalist who came from the States at the close of the war of Independence.