Crossword clues for freckles
Wiktionary
n. (plural of freckle English)
Wikipedia
Freckles is a novel written by the American writer and naturalist Gene Stratton-Porter. It is primarily set in the Limberlost Swamp area of Indiana, with brief scenes set in Chicago. The title character also appears briefly in Porter's A Girl of the Limberlost. The novel is marked by its frequent, detailed, and loving descriptions of the flora and fauna of the wilderness through the eyes of its innocent protagonist.
Freckles are clusters of concentrated melanin which are most often visible on people with a fair complexion.
Freckles may also refer to:
- Freckles (novel), a 1904 American novel
- Freckles (1917 film), a 1917 film based on the novel
- Freckles (1928 film), a 1928 film based on the novel
- Freckles (1935 film), a 1935 film based on the novel
- Freckles (1960 film), a 1960 American film based on the novel
- Freckles Brown (1921–1987), American bull rider
- Freckles and His Friends, a comic strip published in the US from the 1910s to the late 1970s
- "Freckles", a song by Natasha Bedingfield from the album Pocketful of Sunshine
- Candies decorated with Nonpareils
Freckles is a 1960 CinemaScope DeLuxe Color film directed by Andrew McLaglen. It stars Martin West and Carol Christensen.
Freckles is a 1935 American drama film directed by Edward Killy and William Hamilton from a screenplay written by Dorothy Yost, adapted by Mary Mayes from Gene Stratton-Porter's 1904 novel of the same name. Two earlier adaptations of Stratton-Porter's novel had been produced, the first by Paramount in 1917, and the second in 1928 by FBO, both were also titled Freckles. This 1935 version was released by RKO Radio Pictures (which had been formed by the merger of FBO and KAO) on October 4, and stars Tom Brown, Virginia Weidler, and Carol Stone.
Freckles is a 1917 American drama silent film directed by Marshall Neilan and written by Gene Stratton-Porter and Marion Fairfax. The film stars Jack Pickford, Louise Huff, Hobart Bosworth, Lillian Leighton, William Elmer and Guy Oliver. The film was released on May 28, 1917, by Paramount Pictures.
Usage examples of "freckles".
His red hair was bushier, his face paler and the freckles fading his cheeks jowlier.
Thum in a way that made the youth turn bright red beneath his freckles and stammer to a halt.
She had three pale freckles on her small, straight nose, almost hidden by a dusting of powder.
She had pretty blue eyes, more violet than blue, he thought, and freckles on the bridge of her nose.
His face would be ridiculously red against his pale freckles and there would be more dirt, mixed with sweat, under his hairline.
A Big Bang had occurred, originating at the bridge of her nose, and the force of this explosion had sent galaxies of freckles hurtling and drifting to every end of her curved, warm-blooded universe.
There were clusters of freckles on her forearms and wrists, an entire Milky Way spreading across her forehead, even a few sputtering quasars flung into the wormholes of her ears.
The skin between them darkened, too, knitting her freckles together into a speckled harlequin mask.
Here were the freckles on the forehead, on the bridge of the nose, along the ears.
There were times when her freckles were not sunny but like corrosion or rust.
Knucklebones saw freckles on her hand, smelled manure, and bread baking in a cottage, and heard milk sloshing in the pail.
Amsel reaches his hand with its many freckles up the dike, Walter Matern reaches his hand with the pressure marks left by the pocketknife down the dike and with the handshake pulls Amsel up on the dike top.
Eddi Amsel, when he still existed, had fewer but larger freckles in his fat face, brownish and genuine.
Eddi Amsel had many freckles, weighted 203 pounds, had ready wit, knew how to draw good likenesses quick as a flash, and in addition could sing clear as a bell -- even in church.
A fat kid with freckles, but light on his feet like lots of tubbies, and, boy, was he calm!