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Answer for the clue "Inn for Longfellow ", 7 letters:
wayside

Alternative clues for the word wayside

Word definitions for wayside in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ VERB fall ▪ How many more fell by the wayside in the process? ▪ Many of her colleagues had fallen by the wayside . ▪ In any event, the idea that Lazarsfeld had discovered a ubiquitous method of social research has to fall ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Wayside \Way"side`\, a. Of or pertaining to the wayside; as, wayside flowers. ``A wayside inn.'' --Longfellow.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"the side of the road," c.1400, from way (n.) + side (n.). To fall by the wayside is from Luke viii:5.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. edge of a way or road or path; "flowers along the wayside" [syn: roadside ]

Usage examples of wayside.

When they stopped for the night at a wayside inn, Seregil retired immediately, leaving Alec to sit alone over his ale in the common room.

The driver was a Piedmontese and a worthy man: The next day he came into the room of the wayside inn where I was dining, and in the presence of my man asked me whether I had any suspicion that I was being followed.

There is an elegance and delicacy of colour about this little cistus which renders it one of the most charming of the many stars of the wayside, as it grows on Compton Hill.

Monday morning, Adam called the Wayside Inn, established that a waitress named Tina was scheduled to work there that day, then called Scott Covey and made an appointment to meet him at the inn.

There they lay not long, but were afoot betimes in the morning, and rode swiftly daylong, and lay down at night on the wayside with the less dread because they were come so far without hurt.

I showed her where the railways used to run, where the old fishponds and rabbit warrens were, named the few kinds of trees and the one wayside flower the chemicals had left behind.

Clairvaux, when Geoffrey, having laved the hot dust of the road from his body in the cold streams of the Loir, turned in at a wayside castle, and there, in the prime of his life, sickened and died.

Of his personal history it was known only that he had emigrated from Wisconsin in 1852, that he had calmly unyoked his ox teams at Big Flume, then a trackless wilderness, and on the opening of a wagon road to the new mines had built a wayside station which eventually developed into the present hotel.

Guessgate, which served three villages but no town, was a small wayside station with a fairly heavy goods business but little passenger traffic, so that when Brat climbed down from his carriage there was no one on the platform but a fat countrywoman, a sweating porter, the ticket-collector, and Eleanor.

Stewart had casually encountered him, a post rider, in a wayside inn, and was being regaled with one more malefaction to add to the already heavy load on his conscience.

Perm, and it was while waiting for a couple of days at a wayside station in a state of suspended locomotion that he made the acquaintance of a dealer in harness and metalware, who profitably whiled away the tedium of the long halt by initiating his English travelling companion in a fragmentary system of folk-lore that he had picked up from Trans-Baikal traders and natives.

But it was a decision made by the College of Pontifices, and if the members were not kept up to the mark by a conscientious Pontifex Maximus, the calendar fell by the wayside, as it did now.

At the same time the bad news from Canada had had much the same effect witnessed by Adams in the wayside taverns en route from Massachusetts.

Some had fallen by the wayside, but Andy and his chums were among those elected.

And so they rode to Daphne full pelt, greatly to the anger of the too well dressed Antiochenes, who cursed them for the mud they splashed from wayside pools and for the dung and dust they kicked up into plucked and penciled faces.