Crossword clues for greens
greens
- Salad staples
- Salad bar stuff
- Putting areas
- Kale and cabbage
- Golfers' targets
- With pond, Newfoundland community
- They have sought-after holes
- Targets marked with flags
- Supersuckers "Tasty ___"
- Stuff in salads
- Spinach and others
- Seasonal decorations
- Salad-bar stuff
- Salad things
- Salad makings
- Salad makeup
- Putting locales
- Political party
- Olive and pea
- Olive and Kelly
- Lettuce leaves
- Kale and spinach
- Golf destinations?
- Golf course's putting areas
- Christmas colors
- Arugula and escarole
- Environmentalists
- Salad start
- Holey sites
- Golf course features
- Salad base
- Jill Stein's group, with "the"
- Any of various leafy plants or their leaves and stems eaten as vegetables
- Salad ___
- Putting places
- Kind of fee
- Links features
- Carefully prepared patches of ground with holes for vegetables
- Cabbage, sprouts etc
- Easily imposed on Sweden's environmentalists
- Leaves money for sex
- Political party on course
- Places for bowling
- Healthy food for environmentalists
- Topless match, with players from one side in shades
- Salad veggies
- Some Christmas decorations
- Salad leaves
- Salad stuff
- Golf areas
- Links targets
- What some keepers keep
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"freshly cut branches used for decoration," 1690s; "vegetables," 1725, from green. Greens "ecology political party," first recorded 1978, from German die Grünen (West Germany), an outgrowth of Grüne Aktion Zukunft "Green Campaign for the Future," a mainly anti-nuclear power movement, and/or grüne Listen "green lists" (of environmental candidates). Green (adj.) in the sense of "environmental" is attested from 1972; Greenpeace, the international conservation and environmental protection group, is from 1971.
Wiktionary
n. 1 (plural of green English) 2 (context plurale tantum English) The leaf of certain edible green plants, especially of brassicas, eaten as a vegetable. 3 (context plurale tantum English) Any vegetables eaten by humans, regardless of colour. vb. (en-third-person singular of: green)
WordNet
n. any of various leafy plants or their leaves and stems eaten as vegetables [syn: green, leafy vegetable]
Wikipedia
Greens may refer to:
- Leaf vegetables such as collard greens, mustard greens, spring greens, winter greens, spinach, etc.
The Greens were a group of Montenegrin separatists, most notable for instigating the Christmas Uprising of 1919, and for trying to re-establish the Kingdom of Montenegro as an Axis client state during World War II.
The Greens (Verdi–Grüne–Vërc) are a green, regionalist and social-democratic political party active in South Tyrol, northern Italy. Despite being formally the provincial section of the Federation of the Greens, the South Tyrolean Greens are practically an autonomous party and have recently formed different alliances at the country-level from the national party.
The Greens obtained 8.7% of the vote in the most recent provincial election in 2013. The Greens are ethnically mixed and strive to improve the relations between the three language groups of the Province: Italian-, German- and Ladin-speakers. Since 2014 the party has been led by Giorgio Zanvettor and Brigitte Foppa.
Greens is a political party of Ukraine that before 2010 was known as Liberty . The party was created in 2008.
The party participated in the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary elections and obtained vote of 51,386 people, which is 0.25%. Greens did not earn any seats in parliament.
The Greens ( Greek: Πράσινοι, Prasinoi) are a Greek political party that supports the principles of political ecology. Founded by MEP Nikos Chrysogelos after his retirement from the party of Ecologist Greens.
Party's founding purpose is the participation of the 2014 European Parliament election.
On January 4, 2015 announced the cooperation of the party with the Democratic Left in the January 2015 legislative election under the name "Greens - Democratic Left."
Usage examples of "greens".
John Carrere Memorial as she and her escort arrived, the two small clusters of Greens and Grays standing a little apart from each other.
Some of the faces she could recognize in the glow from the Riverside Drive streetlights: Cyril and Aleksander, the leaders of the Greens, who had talked long and earnestly with her before this decision had been made.
The blood roared in her ears, drowning out all other sounds, but in her mind she could feel the anguished calls coming from the Greens over what had to be done, even from those like Cyril who had persuaded them that it was the only way.
Grays, in fact, who now threaten to destroy everything the Greens have spent the last seventy-five years building.
But they were as stubborn as the Greens, and they also insisted on New York.
Torvald, for instance, one of the chief Grays, moved rather brazenly into MacDougal Alley near Washington Square a couple of months ago, chasing all the Greens away from the park.
The two Greens took them a short way down the street, through an open gate into a small brick-and-pavement courtyard, then down another short walkway to a building identifying itself as the Faculty House.
The Greens had been migrating northward, the Grays coming south, and we met in a place we always referred to simply as the Great Valley.
The forest itself went on for miles, filling the area between the ranges, with enough room for generations of Greens to come.
Some Greens even speculated they were an actual, physical cross between Greens and Grays, since they built with stone and metal like the Grays but also cultivated the soil and used wood from trees as we ourselves did.
Caroline Whittier had talked about Greens and Grays last night, suggesting they might be at least some of the thousands of New Yorkers Cyril had been threatening in his phone message.
Look, forget the Greens for a minute and concentrate on what Bergan and Ingvar are going to do if they ever find out that was you.
Were there Greens hiding in all of them, she wondered, nestled in comfortably for the night?
Caroline two hours to compile a list of all the Greens with large land holdings within two hundred miles of the city.
All three Greens were young and tall, striding purposefully toward the road they were driving on.