Search for crossword answers and clues
Shoot from hiding
Answer for the clue "Shoot from hiding ", 5 letters:
snipe
Alternative clues for the word snipe
Word definitions for snipe in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. 1 (lb en plural: '''snipes''' or '''snipe''') Any of various limicoline game birds of the genera ''Gallinago'', ''Lymnocryptes'' and ''Coenocorypha'' in the family Scolopacidae, having a long, slender, nearly straight beak. 2 A fool; a blockhead. ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
I. verb EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ None of those who sniped at his film career were ever to be so lasciviously tempted. ▪ The attack grew so personal, in fact, that attorneys began sniping at one another in front of the jurors. ▪ The Vatican claimed that sniping ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"shoot from a hidden place," 1773 (among British soldiers in India), in reference to hunting snipe as game, from snipe (n.). Figurative use from 1892. Related: Sniped ; sniping .
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Willet \Wil"let\, n. (Zo["o]l.) A large North American snipe ( Symphemia semipalmata ); -- called also pill-willet , will-willet , semipalmated tattler , or snipe , duck snipe , and stone curlew . Carolina willet , the Hudsonian godwit.
Usage examples of snipe.
Clad in a hunting vest with woollen hose, he was engaged in making horse-hair springes for snipes and plover, while his eyes brightened as he beheld the bittern, and he vouchsafed a quiet nod to our salutations.
Clovelly herrings and Torridge salmon, Exmoor mutton and Stow venison, stubble geese and woodcocks, curlew and snipe, hams of Hampshire, chitterlings of Taunton, and botargos of Cadiz, such as Pantagruel himself might have devoured.
Wilson snipe, sandhill crane, Gadwall and canvas-back and red-bill Merganser ducks, American widgeon, red-necked grebe, Dunlin sandpiper, red-winged starling, and scores of equally fantastic prey.
The selection of wildfowl was especially cosmopolitan, including bittern, shoveler, pewit, godwit, quail, dotterl, heronsew, crane, snipe, plover, redshank, pheasant, grouse, and curlew.
Country and a National Geographic, on the coffee table, and she picked up the bird book for refuge in godwits and curlews, sandpipers, snipe, the repose they conjured as quickly gone with another turn of the page and she was up and through the kitchen, tapping on the white door Mister McCandless?
The second floor seemed to have been cleared, and Gord noted that archers and crossbow-armed dwarves were sniping from embrasures at the defenders below.
This here fella came out with his water can and the hider sniped him neat.
Some one - either Jorn or the murderer - managed to snipe Hoyle and tumble him into the street.
With it she had shot snipe in the Okavango Delta, sand grouse in the Karoo, duck and geese on the great Zambezi, grouse on the highland moors, and pheasant, woodcock and partridge on some of the great English estates to which she and the ambassador had been invited.
Despite the downpour, the Day Oners managed some sporadic sniping from windows and rooftops.
The rooks were wheeling over the plough-lands, and the peesweeps and snipe were calling in every meadow.
In the cacophony of negative television ads and sniping by critics, foes are raising doubts about the Clinton plan faster than the President and Hillary Rodham Clinton can explain it.
I do, even if our audience is none but a bunch of roynish, motley-minded snipes.
Malcolm Snipes wrestled the canister of hydrogen selenide into view and found a seat in the front row.
A number of snipes were endeavoring to pull Teledu away from the window.