Crossword clues for elms
elms
- National Mall shaders
- Large shade trees
- Flora in an O'Neill title
- Desire Under the ____
- Desire Under the ___
- Colonnade lineup, sometimes
- Certain shade trees
- Boulevard-lining trees, sometimes
- Boulevard border, perhaps
- Big shade trees
- Backyard spreaders
- "Desire Under the ---"
- ''Desire Under the ___''
- Zelkovas' relatives
- Witch or slippery
- What many bark beetles blemish
- Very common trees
- Two state trees
- Troubled trees
- Trees with ovate leaves
- Trees with oval leaves
- Trees with coarse-grained wood
- Trees with a "rock" variety
- Trees that yield durable wood
- Trees that provide much shade
- Trees that often line city streets
- Trees that New Haven, Connecticut is known for
- Trees that might be attacked by beetles
- Trees that may be slippery
- Trees that line the National Mall
- Trees that bark beetles attack
- Trees planted around Eetion's tomb in the "Iliad"
- Trees on the National Mall
- Trees near Central Park's Literary Walk
- Trees in parks, often
- Trees devastated by a "Dutch" disease
- Trees attacked by bark beetles
- Trees along Pennsylvania Avenue
- Trees along many avenues
- Things that suffered a 20th-century blight
- They often throw shade
- They might line Main Street
- Their leaves are oval
- Tennysons immemorial trees
- Targets of some bark beetles
- Tall grove flora
- Symbols of New England
- Symbols of Massachusetts
- Symbols of hope during the American and French Revolutions
- Suburban trees
- Street-lining trees
- Stately street liners
- Stately shade sources
- Sources of log cabin logs
- Sources of hard or soft wood
- Sources for old wagon wheels
- Some squirrel homes
- Some shade givers
- Some sap producers
- Some boulevard liners
- Some bonsai trees
- Some bark beetle victims
- Some bark beetle targets
- Slippery plants
- Slippery or winged trees
- Sheltering limbs?
- Shady spreaders
- Shady relatives of oaks
- Shady overhangs
- Shady Main Street liners
- Shady group
- Shady arbor, perhaps
- Shade-giving trees
- Samara-bearing trees
- Picnic shade trees
- Pennsylvania Avenue trees
- Oval-leafed trees
- O'Neill's trees
- O'Neill's "Desire Under the ---"
- O'Neill title flora
- Not oaks
- Nightmarish trees?
- Newport, R.I., estate that's a National Historic Landmark, with "the"
- New Haven trees
- New England's pride
- New England symbols
- National Mall shade providers
- National Mall flora
- Morels may be found around them
- Massachusetts' state trees
- Many providers of shade
- Majestic street liners
- Main Street liners
- Leafy trees
- Last word of an O'Neill title
- Landscaper's choices
- Hackberry trees
- Forest makeup, perhaps
- Eugene O'Neill's "Desire Under the ___"
- Endangered trees
- Endangered shade trees
- Dutch and slippery
- Desire trees
- Cousins of zelkovas
- Common shade trees
- Common deciduous trees
- Common Central Park trees
- Colonnade lineup
- Colonnade liners
- Colonnade hardwoods
- Colonnade choices
- Classic boulevard liners
- Classic avenue liners
- Certain deciduous trees
- Canopy components at the Mall in Central Park
- California : palms :: New England : ___
- Boulevard liners, often
- Boston's Liberty Tree and others
- Boston Common trees
- Blighted trees
- Big spreaders
- Avenue trees
- Avenue border, perhaps
- Arboretum lineup
- A tall, shady bunch
- A shady group
- "Slippery" specimens
- "Silent Spring" bemoaned their spraying
- "Desire Under the ___" (1958)
- "Desire Under the ____"
- "Desire Under the _____"
- "'Neath the ___" (Yale song)
- Shady bunch?
- Tennyson's "doves in immemorial _____"
- "Desire Under the ___" (Eugene O'Neill play)
- Stately shaders
- They may be slippery
- Street shaders
- Shade trees
- Items in Gray's country churchyard
- Some are slippery
- Classic street liners
- Stately trees
- "The moan of doves in immemorial ___": Tennyson
- Popular street liners
- They line some old streets
- Tennyson's "immemorial ___"
- Colonnade trees, often
- Threatened flora
- The shady bunch?
- New Haven, City of ___
- Trees in an O'Neill title
- Stately stand
- O'Neill's "Desire Under the ___"
- Once-popular street liners
- Dutch disease victims
- Dutch ___ (uncommon sights nowadays)
- Elegant shade trees
- "Rock'd the full-foliaged ___": Tennyson
- Some blight victims
- Stately shade trees
- Shady giants
- They're seen in many John Constable paintings
- Raw materials for shipbuilding
- "Slippery" trees
- Nine ___ (London district)
- Majestic shade trees
- Historic mansion in Newport, R.I., with "the"
- Classic Main Street liners
- Landmark Newport mansion, with "the"
- Graceful shaders
- Shade providers
- Shady group?
- Sherwood Forest sights
- Part of the New Haven landscape
- State symbols of North Dakota and Massachusetts
- Trees in Gray's country churchyard
- O'Neill title trees
- Group in many a park
- Chinese ___ (popular bonsai trees)
- Classic trees on shady streets
- State symbols of Massachusetts and North Dakota
- Massachusetts' College of Our Lady of the ___
- Frequent features of John Constable landscapes
- Shapely shade trees
- Street-lining trees, sometimes
- Stately hardwoods
- State trees of North Dakota and Massachusetts
- Trees associated with the underworld in Celtic myth
- End of an O'Neill title
- Shade givers
- Shady ones
- Shade makers
- O'Neill trees
- Place of desire?
- Guernsey and Jersey
- Deciduous shaders
- Desirable plants?
- O'Neill silva
- City of _____ (New Haven, Conn.)
- Desire grows beneath these
- Members of genus Ulmus
- Wahoos
- Leafy shaders
- O'Neill locale for lust
- English ___, ornamental trees
- Mass. symbols
- Shady trees
- Desirable trees?
- Graceful trees
- Ernie the golfer must save money to get woods
- Sign of pleasure as one goes climbing trees
- Shade sources
- Deciduous trees
- Hardwood trees
- Source of shade
- 'Desire Under the --'
- Sturdy trees
- Avenue liners
- National Mall trees
- Spreading trees
- Sources of shade
- Tall trees that line some New England streets
- Some shade trees
- Hardwood sources
- Tall shade trees
- Some street liners
- Majestic trees
- Trees with split-resistant wood
- Some trees
- Some shady trees
- Slippery trees?
- Boulevard liners, sometimes
- Wide-spreading trees
- Some shade providers
- National Mall liners
- Many trees
- Certain trees
- Bark beetle victims
- Word in an O'Neill title
- Wahoo and hackberry, e.g
- Towering trees
- Stately shade providers
- Slippery trees
- Promenade trees
- Picnic shaders
- Common trees
- Blighted shade trees
- Bark beetle targets
- Avenue shaders
- 'Desire Under the '
- Winged or slippery trees
- Trees that line some New England streets
- Thicket trees
- They are especially graceful when they leave?
- The Liberty Tree and others
- Suburban street liners
- Street prettifiers
- Street liners
- Some backyard trees
- Sherwood Forest trees
- Shade-providing trees
- Pennsylvania Avenue liners
- Oval-leaved trees
Wiktionary
n. (plural of elm English)
Wikipedia
The Elms (once the Eagle Hotel) is a historic building at the junction of Lewiston and Elm Streets in Mechanic Falls, Maine. Built as a hotel in 1859 and used for a variety of purposes since then, the substantial building is a fine late expression of Greek Revival architecture, and a reminder of the town's heyday as an industrial center. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.
Usage examples of "elms".
She wondered, suddenly, if Travis and Elms remembered that they had been killed, that their bodies had been destroyed.
Neither you nor Elms survived the accident, survived the basalt particles.
I would have wished to see this most holy of the sacraments fulfilled with the others, with Rautavaara and Elms as well.
She wondered, suddenly, whether Travis and Elms remembered that they had been killed, that their bodies had been destroyed.
There was a staff of four at The Elms: a housekeeper, a maid, a cook, and a combination yardman, chauffeur, and husband to the housekeeper.
Army Reserve, arrived at The Elms ten minutes after Pickering left, and Major Edward J.
Pickering asked him then to go directly to The Elms, not only because he liked Banning and wanted to have him to dinner, but also because he liked to keep Banning away from MacArthur's headquarters as much as possible.
Wouldn't it be more convenient if you moved into The Elms with the Sergeant?
There were only three people with a key to the room, and he had told Sergeant John Marston Moore to stay at The Elms until he sent for him.
She was the housekeeper at The Elms, a three-story, twelve-room, red brick house set in what looked to Steve like its own private park fifteen miles or so outside Mel-bourne.
It was called The Elms, Major Banning had told him, because of the century-old elm trees which lined the driveway from the "motorway" to the house.
When I got to The Elms, I saw Koffler had set up one of the radios and an antenna and some batteries and was listening to KYW in Honolulu.
It's an American car, a Studebaker like the Americans at The Elms have.
Banning, USMC, noticed the glow of the headlights flash across the front of The Elms, he rose to his feet and went to one of the French windows in the library.
As Captain Fleming Pickering drove the drop-head Jaguar coupe under the arch of winter-denuded elms toward the house, he was thinking unkind thoughts about the British.