Crossword clues for debs
debs
- Cotillion girls
- Cotillion figures
- Coming-out parties
- Coming-out partiers
- Coming-out gals
- Belles of balls
- Ball stars
- Ball honorees, informally
- Ball babes
- Young society ladies, briefly
- Young society entrants
- Young elite
- Sweet young things
- Southern belles
- Some purchasers of expensive gowns
- Some Junior Leaguers
- Society-page girls
- Society-page figures
- Society newcomers, briefly
- Society gala girls, for short
- Socialist politico Eugene V. ___
- Socialist labor leader
- Socialist Eugene V
- Rookie socialites
- Rich belles, briefly
- Rich belles
- Noted Socialist
- Norman Thomas' precursor
- Newcomers to society
- Newbie socialites
- Labor activist Eugene
- Honorees at coming-out parties
- Girls that have a ball, briefly
- Gala participants, briefly
- Former labor leader Eugene
- Five-time aspirant for Presidency
- First American Railway Union president
- Eugene who helped start the Industrial Workers of the World
- Eugene V. ___, early American Socialist leader
- Eugene in labor history
- Early Socialist presidential candidate Eugene
- Debutantes, slangily
- Cotillion VIPs
- Cotillion presentees
- Cotillion newbies
- Cotillion honorees
- Cotillion attendees
- Coming-out party girls
- Candidate who lost to McKinley, Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson, and Harding
- Belles of the balls
- Belles at some balls, for short
- Balls' belles
- Ballroom belles
- Ball V.I.P.'s
- Aristocratic newcomers
- American Socialist
- "Unionism and Socialism" author
- "The greatest leader in the history of the American working class," per Bernie Sanders
- Presidential candidate of yore
- Candidate of '08
- Socialist Eugene who ran for President five times
- Ball girls?
- Girls in gowns
- Five-time Socialist candidate
- Ball throwers
- Presidential candidate who campaigned from prison
- Young socialites (Abbr.)
- Partygoers
- They're coming out
- Ball belles
- Five-time U.S. presidential candidate in the early 1900s
- Third-place presidential candidate of 1920 who ran his campaign from jail
- U.S. labor leader Eugene
- Girls with coming-out parties
- New members of society
- Third-place candidate in the 1920 presidential election who ran his campaign from jail
- Ones coming out
- Socialites having a ball
- Belles of the ball (Abbr.)
- United States labor organizer who ran for President as a socialist (1855-1926)
- Early U.S. labor leader
- Politician-labor leader
- American Socialist leader Eugene
- They've come out
- American Socialist: 1855-1926
- Five-time also-ran
- Five-time Presidential candidate
- Socialist labor leader: 1855–1926
- Five-time candidate for President
- Memorable U.S. Socialist
- Former perennial Socialist candidate
- Five-time candidate for U.S. Presidency
- Society girls, familiarly
- Five-time Presidential also-ran
- Society entrants
- Coming-out girls
- Socialites' five-time candidate?
- Society's newcomers, for short
- Some Jr. Leaguers
- Society figures
- "Walls and Bars" author
- Society gals
- Society newbies
- Society newcomers, informally
- Belles at balls, informally
- They come out at balls
- Coming-out parties?
- Ball girls, briefly
- Young belles
- Some ball honorees
- Society ball honorees (Abbr.)
- Socialist leader Eugene V
- Socialist candidate Eugene V
- Rookie socialites, for short
- New entrants into society, briefly
Wiktionary
n. (plural of deb English)
Wikipedia
DEBS may refer to:
- Double-entry bookkeeping system
- Distributed Event-Based Systems Conference
- DEBS (6-deoxyerythronolide B synthase)
D.E.B.S. may refer to:
- D.E.B.S. (2003 film), the short film that garnered seven film festival awards
- D.E.B.S. (2004 film), the feature-length film spawned by the short film of the same name
Usage examples of "debs".
For the rest of the day, Debs was out of the office please leave a message.
And she gave a throaty, two-syllable chuckle that sounded as unlike Debs as if she had asked me to show her the best way to cut through living human bone.
But if I found something for Debs, I might at long last have the small opening I had hoped for.
I looked at my sister, who had always been Deborah or Debs but certainly never Debbie.
It was elegant and fascinating and almost as interesting as the fact that Debs had apparently forgotten she was driving.
I knew that she needed some kind of chemical help to relax and even sleep if possible, but Debs had nothing in her medicine chest stronger than Tylenol, and she was not a drinker.
I suppose Debs was thinking about Kyle and wondering if we would find him in time.
Oscar was driving wildly, dangerously close to slamming into the traffic or running up onto the sidewalk, and naturally enough, Debs was not going to let herself lose this kind of pissing contest.
After half a second, Debs straightened us out of our slide and followed them down onto the street.
But Debs just clamped her jaw tight and squealed around the truck and through the intersection, ignoring the horns and the fountain of water from the ruptured hydrant, and closing the gap again in the next block.
They swooped in and gave Debs a once-over, and they moved her onto their gurney, raised it up, and began to wheel her toward the waiting ambulance.
I got back to my little bunk and saw it in a state of terrible disarray, I remembered that Debs should have been here but was, instead, in the hospital.
It had the feel of something final in my relationship with my sister, a small lapse in judgment, perhaps, but one she would find a bit hard to forgive, and even though I am not capable of feeling actual love, I did want to keep Debs relatively happy with me.
There was certainly nobody who would grieve over me, especially if Debs went out at the same time.
Then Danco slipped off the table, and Debs knelt beside Chutsky and felt for a pulse.