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Vegas pull-downs
Answer for the clue "Vegas pull-downs ", 5 letters:
slots
Alternative clues for the word slots
Usage examples of slots.
Shore blouse was working two slots, loading and pulling one while waiting for the other to clock down.
They were closer to the slot-players in temperament, but they knew the slots were a dodge to keep the old ladies busy, while the players worked toward their endless twenty-ones.
TAC sergeants assigned us to various slots in a student company: squad leaders, platoon ,leaders, first sergeant, platoon sergeants, and so on.
Especially not on slots, which were set by computers to give a certain return.
Six radial grooves, or slots, were deeply recessed in the metal, and lying in them were six crossed bars like the spokes of a rimless wheel, with a small hub at the centre.
There are also two parallel slots, about a centimetre wide, cut in the walls and running the whole length of the tunnel.
Surgeon-Commander Ernst slid a captive chair across in its slots and sat down beside him.
She pulled out a packet, opened it and fed the necessary power packs into the slots, and although pressing the red button still provided no visible results, I was pretty confident we were in business.
Craps table at the Flamingo for a while, had walked across the street to listen for patterns in the ringing and clattering of the slots at Caesars Palace, and then had written down a hundred consecutive numbers that came up on a Roulette wheel at the Mirage.
I can track my odds today, and tonight mess with the slots in the market entrances while you guys go in and ask your question.
Dondi Snayheever could still get plenty of free popcorn at the Slots of Fun on the Strip.
Extra circuits had been built into the matrixes that were in the three similarity slots of the control board.
It was a bit confusing to have two Navy captains aboard the same ship, both in command slots, even if one of them was a junior-grade and the other a senior-grade.
Chinese take-out places, liquor stores, bodegas, all of them serving their customers through slots or sliding drawers in shields of Plexiglas.
On the second floor, protective custody, the rooms were Inspector Clouseau loony bins: barred windows, knobless doors with slots for the exchange, I supposed, of trays or papers.