Crossword clues for items
items
- Checklist units
- Agenda lines
- Word on an express checkout sign
- Wishlist entries
- Smite (anag)
- Single articles
- Short stories
- Short news pieces
- Shopping cart fillers
- Newsy tidbits
- Newspaper articles
- News tidbits
- Market express lane units
- Inventory stock, in adventure games
- Couples in tabloids
- Cart fillers
- Cart count
- Agenda things
- Agenda bullets
- Agenda bits
- "TMZ" twosomes
- ''Entertainment Tonight'' topics
- Word seen before "or less" on supermarket signs
- Twosomes in the news
- To-do list bullets
- Things with bullets on an agenda
- Things on the agenda
- Things on a checklist
- They're on the agenda
- They're often collected in video games
- They're in the news
- They're gossiped about
- They might get ticked off
- They may follow bullets
- These are auctioned at music expo
- Talked-about twosomes
- Tabloids twosomes
- Tabloid features
- Tabloid blurbs about rockers
- Supermarket express lane units
- Strings and CDs, for example
- Store inventory
- Single things or objects
- Shopping list entries
- Shopping list components
- Shopping list articles
- Shopping cart tally
- Shopper's selections
- Popular twosomes
- People pairs, say
- Particulars of bills
- Parsons or Fidler paragraphs
- Newsworthy twos
- News stories
- News fillers
- Lovey-dovey pairs
- List units
- List listings
- Individual things on a list
- Individual things
- Individual parts of an agenda
- Individual parts
- Hollywood pairs
- Grocery-cart contents
- Grocery line count
- Gossip-rag tidbits
- Gossip tidbits
- Gossip page tidbits
- Gossip column tidbits
- Gossip column couples
- Fifteen ___ or less
- Express line sign word
- Express checkout units
- Express checkout line count
- Entries in a list
- Discrete things
- Couples, so to speak
- Couples, in columns
- Couples in the gossip pages
- Couples in gossip columns
- Column couples
- Collection pieces
- Checkout-line count
- Celebrity pairs, often
- Celebrity pairings
- Celeb dating pairs
- Cart contents
- Carry-on ___
- Bullets may precede them
- Bullet accompaniers
- Bits of information
- Agenda's content
- Agenda fodder
- 12 what or less?
- "15 ___ or less" (supermarket checkout sign)
- "12 ___ or less" (checkout lane sign)
- "12 ___ or less"
- "10 ___ or less" (sign at an express checkout line)
- "10 ___ or less" (checkout line sign)
- "10 ___ or less" (checkout lane sign)
- And whosiwhatsits
- New couples
- Twos in the news
- Agenda listings
- List components
- Points
- News briefs
- News paragraphs
- Features
- Knickknacks
- Inventory list
- List makeup
- Articles
- Subjects of gossip
- Particulars on a bill
- Agenda entries
- Checkout counter count
- Short pieces
- They may have bullets
- Things on a list
- Agenda details
- Receipt listings
- Stuff
- Gossipy squibs
- Tabloid twosomes
- Tabloid duos
- Bullet followers
- "10 ___ or less" (checkout sign)
- Parts of a list
- "10 ___ or less" (checkout line sign that grates on grammarians)
- Lovey-dovey pairs, in tabloids
- Twosomes in the tabloids?
- Bullet points
- Celebrity couples, usually
- 10 ___ or less (supermarket checkout sign)
- News articles
- Agenda makeup
- *Grocery line count
- Agenda units
- Agenda parts
- List contents
- Short news paragraphs
- List particulars
- Hollywooders going steady
- Details
- List entries
- News bits
- Sundries
- Limit 10 ____ (checkout sign)
- Paraphernalia
- Gossip morsels
- Units in a list
- Parts of an inventory
- Newsy bits
- List parts
- Newspaper entries
- Single entries
- Bits and pieces
- Bits of gossip
- Units of news
- Separate articles
- Shopping-list notations
- Entries in an acoount
- Briefs
- Parts of lists
- Objects to special police force turning up after lunchtime
- Sex with 'small' yours truly upset couples
- It gets large print spaces in newspaper features
- Individual articles
- Upset friends met indoors, some of them couples
- To-do list entries
- Menu listings
- Chairperson's list
- Shopping cart contents
- Checkout line count
- News pieces
- Lines on a list
- Checkout units
- Word on an express lane sign
- Express lane count
- Tabloid couples
- Short articles
- Newsy nuggets
- List details
- Agenda topics
- Agenda elements
- Agenda contents
- Things in a shopping basket
- Some news paragraphs
- Newsy twosomes
- Gossip column fodder
- Couples, in the tabloids
- Checkout count
- Bits of news
- Agenda components
- Things on an agenda
- Single entities
- Newspaper pieces
- Invoice lines
- Grocery checkout count
- Dating pairs
Wiktionary
n. (plural of item English)
Usage examples of "items".
And the theory being, of the items listed, if the examinee reacts to the key one, he definitely has pertinent information with regard to the crime in question.
In light of the bloodiness of the crime, its hands-on physicality, and the number of victims and defendants, the discovery of a few mass-produced fibers from items available in Wal-Marts and other clothiers all over the country struck Lax as an infinitesimal amount of evidence, which was also highly circumstantial.
In other words, Fogleman suggested, Damien and Jason had picked up fibers from items in their homes and inadvertently left them with the bodies.
In addition to numerous fingerprints, blood, and urine samples, Lax counted more than one hundred items of clothing, eighty-seven samples of hair, seventeen knives, three sticks, three hammers, three ropes, two razors, an ice axe, a candle, a hook, a mask, and a Mason jar full of water.
The two suspects told police that White had hocked many items, including various guns and his service revolver, to purchase drugs.
Other members of the task force reported that Sudbury had taken several other items as well.
He admits being caught with Satanic items and with handwritten books about witchcraft.
Still trying to suppress items found in the search, the defense lawyers called to the stand Lisa Sakevicius, an analyst from the state crime lab.
Various items were found in his room, including a funeral register upon which he had drawn a pentagram and upside-down crosses and had copied spells.
There, for a couple of days, the two pored over the hundreds of items still in storage from the case.
They concluded that there was a reasonable chance that some of the items they examined might yield new information.
The lawyer said that he wanted to retest several items, including the knife with blood in its fold that had belonged to John Mark Byers.
The pages are stored, along with items of evidence and artifacts from the investigation, at the West Memphis Police Department.
A state police report concluded that, though items could have been passed between cells, the opening was not large enough for a man.
There they found three Oriental rugs, which were among the items that had been reported stolen.