Crossword clues for in two
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Two \Two\, n.
The sum of one and one; the number next greater than one, and next less than three; two units or objects.
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A symbol representing two units, as 2, II., or ii.
In two, asunder; into parts; in halves; in twain; as, cut in two.
Usage examples of "in two".
The bizarre part was that the infectious particles are unique, consisting of only protein and containing no DNA or RNA, a proposition so scientifically heretical that the study of these particles and the diseases they produce had already generated Nobel Prizes for medicine in two different years.
Now, however, a fosse and earthen embankment circled the village and the innermost fields, orchards, and pasturage, cut in two spots by the course of the river.
We tried putting ethyl-cellulose in two years ago and the same thing happened.
The governor studied him a while longer, then looked away in two directions at once.
More would fall this winter, Russie thought, and buildings wrecked in two rounds of fighting would be cannibalized for wood.
Not even a spy ship could be in two places at once, and if the Russians had spun a rouble it must have fallen hammer-and-sickle down instead of up.
Bog juice was a non-alcoholic liquid that came in two colours, red and green, and got served up with meals in US warships.
It seemed carrying a jest too far when these citizens, most of whom had not even smelt a drink in two years, found themselves billeted into padded cells and confronted by rows of strait-jackets.
The Abellican Church had always been strong here, but strong in two separate factions.
For at least the hundredth time in two weeks, he told me that the Eurovision show was, after the Olympics and the Oscars, the most-watched TV program in the world.
They were at the lower end of the inclosure, which was divided almost in two by a broader pathway leading from the house to the centre of the garden, where a fountain of Moorish marble formed a sort of carrefour, from which the narrower pathways diverged in all directions.
The sun had just set behind the distant hills of Old Castile, and from the east, over Aranjuez, where the great river cuts Spain in two parts from its centre to the sea, a grey cloud - a very shade of night - was slowly rising.