Crossword clues for anyone
anyone
- Joe Blow
- "I don't care who"
- Who an unspecified individual could be
- Volunteer-seeker's query
- Random individual
- Fishing line?
- "Who's interested?"
- "____ Can Play"
- ''Who'd like to volunteer?''
- You, me, him, whoever
- Word with "Tennis"
- Word after "Tennis"
- Vague person?
- Throwing-it-open inquiry
- Tennis, ___?
- Tennis partner?
- Tennis follower
- Teacher's follow-up question after no hands are raised, perhaps
- Radiohead "___ Can Play Guitar"
- Person to play tennis with?
- Perennial question from Ferris Bueller's teacher
- Nonspecific individual
- No specific person
- No one excluded
- Memorable repeated question by the economics teacher (played by Ben Stein) in "Ferris Bueller's Day Off"
- I dont care who!
- Familiar name in tennis
- "Tennis, __?"
- "Tennis ___?"
- "Looking for volunteers..."
- "I wouldn't do this for just __"
- "Do we have a volunteer?"
- "Can I get a volunteer? Somebody ...?"
- "__ home?"
- "__ else?"
- "__ can play!": "It's easy!"
- 'Tennis, --?'
- 'Doesn't matter who'
- '-- home?'
- Whosoever
- "Who'll volunteer?"
- "Tennis, ___?"
- See 3-Down
- Tom, Dick or Harry
- "___ home?"
- Potential tennis opponent?
- "Who'd like to volunteer?"
- See 21-Down
- Random person
- See 38-Across
- Nobody in particular
- "Do I have a volunteer?"
- "Who wants to go next?"
- "Who wants to volunteer?"
- "Volunteers?"
- Question repeatedly posed by Ferris Bueller's teacher
- "Who knows the answer?"
- Nobody special
- " . . . he who receives ___ I send, receives me"
- "___ for tennis?"
- No particular person
- "Can ___ Explain?": 1950 song
- Whoever wants it
- Last-minute tennis partner
- "Who has an answer?"
- "___ Can Whistle," Sondheim musical
- Unspecified person
- An unparticular person
- An unspecified person
- A random person
- Single person annoyed about missing date
- Nobody in particular is fit to tour city
- No matter who
- Anybody at all
- In a US city married undistinguished person
- Whatever person
- Volunteer-seeking question
- Tennis, ____?
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Anyone \A"ny*one\, n. One taken at random rather than by selection; anybody.
Note: [Commonly written as two words.]
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Wiktionary
pron. any person; anybody.
Wikipedia
Anyone is a band from Southern California that formed in 1995. Their 2001 self-titled album was released on Roadrunner Records. The band are credited with creating the genre known as "maximum acid", combining a heavy metal sound with psychedelic rock influences. Anyone is the brainchild of Riz Story, the band's lead singer, guitarist, songwriter and producer, and also the only member of the band that has remained since its inception.
ANYONE received much critical acclaim for its label debut throughout the international press, especially in Europe. The band toured extensively on the album, notably at the Reading Festival, Leeds Festival and Lowland Festival as well as 3 American tours. The album received many honors including being named #9 on the metal hammer year end chart for Metal Hammer's Albums Of 2001 list.[3] Other awards include "best band" Los Angeles Music Awards.
"Anyone" is the second single from Swedish duo Roxette's Have a Nice Day album. It was released in May 1999.
Usage examples of "anyone".
From the day he saw with his own eyes what the British had done at Lexington and Concord, Adams failed to understand how anyone could have any misconception or naive hope about what to expect from the British.
WHAT NEITHER JOHN DICKINSON nor John Adams nor anyone could have anticipated was the stunning effect of Common Sense.
There was more to be done by sea and land than anyone knew, Adams kept saying.
Much as he foresaw the hard truth about the war to be waged, Adams had the clearest idea of anyone in Congress of what independence would actually entail, the great difficulties and risks, no less than the opportunities.
From the flow of dispatches arriving at the War Office in Philadelphia, Adams was more aware of the situation than anyone in Congress and he was miserable, thinking about the consequences of a defeat at New York.
Not until the government at The Hague took it upon itself to recognize the United States would anyone in the government be permitted to receive Adams officially.
Of the overwhelming convulsion soon to come in France, of the violent end in the offing for the whole European world Adams had come to know, he appears to have had few if any premonitions, no more than anyone else.
Yet through it all, true to his promise, Adams had shown no anger or acted discourteously to anyone.
Ahead of anyone in the government, and more clearly than any, Adams foresaw the French Revolution leading to chaos, horror, and ultimate tyranny.
In theory, Jefferson deplored parties or faction no less than did Adams or anyone.
But with the exception of Madison, Adams understood Jefferson as well as anyone did, or perhaps ever could.
With Rush, Adams felt free to say things not possible with just anyone, as for example in appraising those they had known in the struggle.
She was forty-nine and for most of her life, as Adams would tell Jefferson, she had enjoyed the best health of anyone in the family.
She had had the foresight to bring with her an adaptor plug for her hair dryer and later she blamed the noise the dryer was making for masking the sound of anyone knocking on her door.
They are on their own, lost, lost to this obscene place, a place larger than anyone can safely care for, the place his carefully isolated adaptor molecules locate and leave him to.