Crossword clues for angie
angie
- "Police Woman" actress Dickinson
- "Agent Cody Banks" actress Harmon
- Woman with an online "list"
- Woman with a well-known internet "list"
- Woman with a famous list
- Who the Stones said, "Ain't it time we said goodbye?" to
- What Germans call Merkel
- Title woman in a 1973 chart-topping breakup song
- Title person in a Rolling Stones hit
- Stones ballad
- Rolling Stones song with the lyric "Let me whisper in your ear"
- Rolling Stones #1 hit of 1973
- Novelist Thomas
- No. 1 Rolling Stones hit of 1973
- Namesake of an online list
- Mrs. Bacharach
- Model/actress Everhart
- Joe's sister in TV's "Under the Dome"
- Internet list co-founder Hicks
- Hit featured on the Rolling Stones' "Goats Head Soup" album
- Hicks known for a list
- Harmon who plays Jane Rizzoli on the tube
- Harmon of Law & Order
- Harmon of "Women's Murder Club"
- Harmon of "Good Advice"
- Harmon of "Baywatch Nights"
- Former TBS comedy "__ Tribeca"
- Eponymous Hicks with an online list
- Dickinson of "Dressed to Kill"
- Dickinson of 'The Chase'
- Dickinson of ''Police Woman''
- Dickinson from N.D
- Businesswoman Hicks with an Internet list
- Actress Harmon of "Rizzoli & Isles"
- 1994 Geena Davis film
- 1973 Rolling Stones No. 1 hit
- 1973 Rolling Stones classic
- 1973 #1 song from the Rolling Stones
- 1973 #1 Rolling Stones love ballad
- 1973 #1 hit for the Stones
- #1 Rolling Stones hit
- "With no loving in our souls and no money in our coats" Stones song
- "The Hate U Give" author Thomas
- "Rizzoli & Isles" actress Harmon
- "Black Diamond" artist Stone
- 1973 hit by the Rolling Stones
- 1973 Rolling Stones hit
- Actress Dickinson
- 1973 Rolling Stones #1 song
- 1973 Rolling Stones #1 hit
- Marty's friend in "Marty"
- 1973 #1 Rolling Stones hit that's a woman's name
- Model Everhart
- 1973 Rolling Stones ballad
- 1973 #1 hit for the Rolling Stones
- Girl's name in #1 1973 and 1974 song titles
- Dickinson of TV's "Police Woman"
- Love ballad from the 1973 album "Goats Head Soup"
- She's asked "When will those clouds all disappear?" in a 1973 #1 hit
- Rolling Stones #1 hit with the lyric "You're beautiful, but ain't it time we said goodbye?"
- Woman who lent her name to a business-locating "list"
- Rolling Stones hit: 1973
- Marty's pal, in the movie
- Dickinson from N.D.
- Dickinson from Kulm, N. D.
- Donna Pescow show
- TV actress Dickinson
- Rolling Stones classic
- Dickinson of "Police Woman"
- Rolling Stones hit song
- Rolling Stones song
- Harmon of "Rizzoli & Isles"
- Actress Harmon
- Rolling Stones hit
- 1973 Stones ballad
- Former TV star Dickinson
- Miss Dickinson
- 1973 Rolling Stones chart-topper
- Woman with an online list
- Stones classic
- Rolling Stones title woman
- Rolling Stones hit of 1973
- Rolling Stones #1 song
- Hollywood's Dickinson
- Hit by the Rolling Stones
- Harmon of TV
- Harmon of "Law & Order"
- Harmon of 'Rizzoli & Isles'
- Dickinson or Harmon
- Actress Everhart
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 114
Land area (2000): 1.523762 sq. miles (3.946525 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.006543 sq. miles (0.016945 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.530305 sq. miles (3.963470 sq. km)
FIPS code: 02165
Located within: Louisiana (LA), FIPS 22
Location: 30.964480 N, 89.813748 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 70426
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Angie
Wikipedia
Angie is an American sitcom that was originally broadcast by the ABC network from February 2, 1979 to September 4, 1980. The series was created by Garry Marshall and Dale McRaven, and produced by Miller-Milkis Productions (Miller-Milkis-Boyett in season two) in association with Paramount Television.
The series starred Donna Pescow in the lead role, Robert Hays as her love interest and eventual husband, and Doris Roberts and Debralee Scott as her mother and sister, respectively.
A DVD release of the series was announced, for release later in 2015.
Angie is a 1994 American romantic comedy-drama film directed by Martha Coolidge, and starring Geena Davis as the title character. It is based on the 1991 novel Angie, I Says by Avra Wing, which was a New York Times Notable Book of 1991.
Angie may refer to:
- Angie (given name)
Angie is the first album recorded by the Latina R&B vocalist Angela Bofill. It was produced by the GRP Records label heads Dave Grusin and Larry Rosen. It was released in 1978 on the GRP label; a digitally remastered version was released on Buddah Records in 2001.
"Angie" is a song by the rock band The Rolling Stones, featured on their 1973 album Goats Head Soup.
' Angie ' is a 1993 Dutch crime thriller film directed by Martin Lagestee. The film is about a girl named Angie ( Annemarie Röttgering) who becomes involved in a life of crime.
The 'Angie' mango is a named mango cultivar that originated in south Florida.
Angie is hypocorism of three different names in English. It can be the pet form of the feminine Angela, Angelina, or of the masculine Angus (pronounced 'an-ghee').
Angie may refer to:
Angie is a novel by Slovenian author Janja Vidmar. It was first published in 2007.
Usage examples of "angie".
He had argued with Angie and scorned his servants for their quickness to believe in things supernatural.
Brian, Dafydd, and Angie were just as he had left them at the High Table.
It had been a pretty good statement on his part, he was thinking-and then, with the sensitivity of a well-trained husband (though he and Angie had only been married since they had come to this medieval world), suddenly he was sure it had been nothing of the sort, as far as convincing Angie had gone.
There was silence as Jim and Angie sat down, and one servant poured wine for them, while another offered the trays of small foods that would start the supper.
Though he was used to Angie, who was surprisingly fast on her feet, this one was sprinting like an Olympic contender.
Privately, to Angie, he had called it “an invitation to a train wreck.
For the first time since he and Angie had come to this world, Jim felt a piercing homesickness for the century of their birth.
As long as he could see Angie in his mind, he told himself, the rift could not take him.
The trouble is, Angie, Lyonesse hasn’t really got that many people in it.
It was a piece of grayish, thick paper, much like the kind Angie used at Malencontri to keep their accounts.
But you know, Angie, it was the animals-little tiny animals attacking armed men in armor!
She had glowed like that when they had brought the baby Robert Falon, legally Jim’s ward now by order of King Edward, home to Malencontri and Angie had learned they could keep the boy.
He hastily caught it from the last words Angie was presently reciting.
But when Angie stopped at last, he looked at her for a long moment before saying anything.
They were well matched, Angie and Bobby, born out of vacuums, Angie from the clean blank kingdom of Maas Biolabs and Bobby from the boredom of Barrytown .