Crossword clues for ives
ives
- Currier partner
- Currier & ___ (printmaking firm)
- Burl who told the story of Rudolph
- Burl who sang "A Holly Jolly Christmas"
- Balladeer Burl
- "Blue Tail Fly" singer Burl
- Senator from New York
- Printmaking partner of Currier
- One of a noted lithographic pair
- Jimmy Crack Corn singer
- Folk singer from Ill
- Currier's printmaking partner
- Currier's art partner
- Currier cohort
- Burly Burl whose first Broadway show was "The Boys from Syracuse"
- Burl the "Rudolph" singer
- Burl or St
- "Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer" narrator Burl
- "Frosty the Snowman" singer Burl
- "Calcium Light Night" composer Charles
- "As I was going to St. ___ "
- "As I was going to St. ___ . . . "
- ''The Camp Meeting'' composer
- ''Blue Tail Fly'' singer
- Three Places in New England composer
- The Wayfaring Stranger
- The Unanswered Question composer
- Symphonic composer Charles
- Surname on "Maple Sugaring" and" The Sleigh Race"
- St.____ Bronson film
- St. ____: Bronson film
- St. ___ (skin care brand)
- Singer/actor who narrated 1964's "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer"
- Singer Burl ___
- Singer and actor Burl
- Saint in a children's rhyme
- Saint ____
- Rudolph storyteller
- R.L. Stevenson book, ''St. ___''
- Printer mentioned in "Sleigh Ride"
- Oscar-winning actor Burl ___
- Oscar winner, 1958
- One of the "Publishers of Cheap and Popular Pictures"
- Noted composer Charles who, in his lifetime, few even kneW
- Noted 19th-century lithographer
- New York's re-elected Senator
- New York Senator
- Musician Burl or Charles
- Lithography legend
- Lithographer partner
- James Merritt ___, pioneer in American lithography
- Important lithographer
- Iconic lithographer
- He was "Big Daddy" in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"
- He played Newman's dad in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"
- Folksy Burl
- Folk-singer Burl
- Famous folk singer
- Famed lithographer
- Eminent lithographer
- Currier's partner in printmaking
- Currier's pal
- Currier's friend
- Currier colleague
- Currier collaborator
- Currier and --
- Currier and __: printmakers
- Currier and __ print
- Credit on "A Home in the Wilderness"
- Connecticut's State Composer
- Composer who was an accomplished pianist
- Composer of Three Places in New England, d. 1954
- Composer of the 1906 "Central Park in the Dark"
- Composer of the "Concord" Sonata
- Composer championed by Copland and Bernstein
- Central Park in the Dark composer
- Burl with a 1959 Oscar
- Burl who sang about Rudolph
- Burl of song
- Burl of folk
- Burl of film and song
- Big name in rural lithography
- Best Supporting Actor of 1958
- Best Supporting Actor for 1958's "The Big Country"
- Bearded folk singer
- As I was going to St. ___ ...
- Actor/singer Burl
- Actor who narrated "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer"
- 1958 Oscar winner Burl
- **"As I was going to St. ___ ..."
- "The Big Country" Oscar winner Burl
- "Emerson Concerto" composer
- "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" actor Burl
- "Calcium Night Light" composer
- "Big Daddy" Burl of "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"
- "A Little Bitty Tear" singer Burl
- "A Little Bitty Tear" singer
- " . . . going to St. ___"
- ''Three Places in New England'' composer
- ''The Unanswered Question'' composer
- 1947 Pulitzer composer
- 1958 Oscar winner for "The Big Country"
- Noted name in lithography
- "The Camp Meeting" composer
- "O For a Thousand Tongues" composer
- Noted lithographer
- "Concord" sonata composer
- "Concord Sonata" composer
- Singer Burl who narrated the 1964 animated classic, "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer"
- "Concord" composer
- Pulitzer winner for "Symphony No. 3"
- "A Little Bitty Tear" singer, 1962
- Currier's partner in lithography
- "A Little Bitty Tear" hit maker, 1962
- Folk singer Burl
- Currier's companion
- Big Daddy portrayer, in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"
- Lithographer James Merritt ___
- "The Celestial Country" composer
- American composer who pioneered in polytonality
- Frederic who invented halftone photoengraving
- Lithographer of Americana
- Composer Charles
- "Variations on 'America'" composer
- Noted Americana lithographer
- "Funny Way of Laughin'" singer, 1962
- Big name in lithography
- Name on many prints
- Currier and ____
- "Universe Symphony" composer
- Big Daddy player on 1950s Broadway
- "The Unanswered Question" composer, 1908
- "Three Places in New England" composer Charles
- Burl who won an Oscar for "The Big Country"
- First major publisher of board games in the U.S.
- Burl of stage and song
- St. ___, place in a children's rhyme
- St. ___, Cornwall
- Saint of a children's rhyme
- James Merritt ___, pioneering lithographer
- "Riders in the Sky" singer, 1949
- "Venus in Fur" playwright David
- United States composer noted for his innovative use of polytonality (1874-1954)
- United States lithographer who (with his partner Nathaniel Currier) produced thousands of prints signed `Currier & Ives' (1824-1895)
- St. ___ (Cornwall resort town)
- Currier's colleague
- U.S. composer of "Concord"
- Burl or Charles
- Burl of show biz
- St. in a children's rhyme
- Mrs. ___, sister of A.E.S.
- Folk singer from Ill.
- Type of grape
- American composer: 1874-1954
- U.S. composer: 1874-1954
- Burl ____ of film
- Lithograph man
- U.S. composer Charles ___
- He portrayed Big Daddy
- Actor-singer Burl
- Partner of Currier
- Oscar winner: 1958
- St. ____ (English seaside resort)
- "As I was going to St. _____..."
- Oscar winner in "The Big Country"
- Patron saint of lawyers
- Avant-garde U.S. composer
- See 96 Down
- Singer-actor Burl ___
- Burl of songdom
- St. ___ (town near Penzance)
- American lithographer
- Oscar winner in 1958
- Famous name in lithography
- "Harvest Festival" composer
- Burl or Saint
- Burl of songs and films
- Oscar winner Burl ___
- Famed lithographer James Merritt ___
- Actor Burl or composer Charles
- U.S. composer: 1874–1954
- He played Big Daddy
- A 1958 Oscar winner
- American who scored heroin leaves busy places
- Composer's endless component of salad
- Composer introduced by these violinists doing a turn
- First major publisher of board games in the U.S
- American composer of Three Places in New England, d. 1954
- US composer, d. 1954 - US folk singer, d. 1995
- "Central Park in the Dark" composer
- U. S. composer
- Modernist composer Charles
- He told the story of Rudolph
- Folksinger Burl
- "As I was going to St. ___ ..."
- Currier's lithography partner
- Burl of "East of Eden"
- American composer Charles
- "A Holly Jolly Christmas" singer
- ''Blue Tail Fly'' singer Burl
Gazetteer
Wikipedia
Ives is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include:
Surname:
- Burl Ives (1909–1995), American singer, author, and actor
- Charles Ives (1874–1954), American composer
- Charles Ives (footballer) (1907–1942), football player from New Zealand
- Chauncey Bradley Ives (1810–1894), American sculptor in Italy
- Clarrie Ives, Australian rugby league footballer
- Clay Ives (born 1972), Canadian-born American luger
- David Ives (born 1950), contemporary American playwright
- Dick Ives (1926–1997), American basketball player
- Edward D. Ives (1925-2009), American folklorist
- Edward Ives (toymaker) (1839–1918), U.S. toymaker
- Edward Ives (rower) (born 1961), American Olympic oarsman
- Edward H. Ives, Wisconsin politician
- Eric Ives (1931–2012), English historian
- Eugene S. Ives (1859–1917), New York and Arizona politician
- F. Badger Ives (1858-1914), Wisconsin politician
- Frederic Eugene Ives (1856–1937), photography and halftoning pioneer
- George Cecil Ives (1867–1950), poet, writer, penal reformer and early gay rights campaigner
- George Frederick Ives (1881–1993), last surviving veteran of the Boer War
- Gideon S. Ives (1846-1927), American politician
- Grayston Ives (born 1948), British composer, singer and choral director
- Greg Ives (born 1979), American NASCAR crew chief
- Halsey Ives (1847–1911), American art museum director
- Henry S. Ives (circa 1862-1894), American financier
- Herbert Eugene Ives (1882–1953), physicist and inventor; son of Frederick Ives
- James Merritt Ives (1824–1895), American lithographer; founder of Currier and Ives
- John Ives (1751–1776), English antiquarian and officer of arms
- Joseph Christmas Ives (1829–1868), American botanist, surveyor, engineer and Confederate officer
- Joshua Ives (1854–1931), first Professor of Music at the University of Adelaide, South Australia
- William Ives, several people; see William Ives (disambiguation)
Given name:
- Ives Antero De Souza (born 1985), Brazilian football (soccer) player
- Ives Roqueta (born 1936), Occitan author
- Ivo of Ramsey (before 1000), Cornish saint
- Ivo of Chartres (1040 – 1115), French bishop and saint
- Ives of Kermartin (1253–1303), also known as Ivo of Kermartin, French parish priest and patron saint of Brittany, lawyers, and abandoned children
- Ives I de Belesme, 10th century Norman baron, controlling the lands and tower of Belesme
Ives is a crater on Mercury. It has a diameter of 20 kilometers. Its name was adopted by the International Astronomical Union in 1979. Ives is named for the American composer Charles Ives, who lived from 1874 to 1954.
Usage examples of "ives".
Okay, I found out beyond any doubt that the break-in wasn't accomplished until the day after Ives was clobbered.
From what I can find out, Ives used him for scut work, paying him a dollar an hour for washing trays, drying prints, that sort of thing.
I think Ives made the mistake of trying to blackmail a previous client, someone who knew who he was and where to find him.
Those pictures Ives took of your husband-to-be would have upset the professor.
You know, it wasn't smart of Ives to blackmail his previous client with the pictures he took, because Vance knew him.
All he cared was that it got him off the hook, and when no confederate appeared to pick up where Ives had left off, he knew he was home free.
Believing Vance had killed Ives, and knowing that he could be a good big source of income to her for the rest of her life, she got in touch with him.
And someone who could get close to Ives and close to Patty at night, in lonely places, whereas Vance couldn't have managed it.
He hadn't put it on, so you had, and Patty was dead in the same way Ives was dead, and he found himself in a pretty eerie marriage.
Der größere von beiden erklärte dem FBI-Beamten: »Wir sollen Sie zu Colonel Theodore Ives bringen, Sir.
Der Raum, in dem Ives sich befand, war für Genelli noch wesentlich interessanter als der Mann selbst.
Trotz seiner sachlichen Art benötigte Ives immer noch eine halbe Stunde, um Genelli die komplizierten Zusammenhänge begreiflich zu machen.
Während dieser Zeit erschienen immer wieder die beiden Techniker, um Anordnungen und Befehle zu erbitten oder Ives über eine neue Entwicklung in Kenntnis zu setzen.
Nachdem er den FBI-Mann über alles Wesentliche informiert hatte, schloß Ives mit den Worten: »Und nun haben Sie sicher einige Fragen.
Er marschierte rasch durch den Raum und verschwand durch die Tür, bevor Ives noch etwas sagen konnte.