Crossword clues for iwin
iwin
- "In. Your. Face!"
- "Heads ___"
- What the victor might say at the end of the game: 2 wds
- Victory chant
- Victors cry
- Victorious declaration
- Victor’s cry
- Victor's words
- Victor's claim
- Triumphant declaration
- Tape breaker's cry
- Sports report of a sort
- Postgame declaration
- Phrase said with a fist pump
- Phrase at a game's end, perhaps
- Gloater's boast
- Declaration of victory
- Cry from the first finisher
- Cry after checkmating your opponent
- Champion's crow
- Champ's shout
- Champ's crow
- "Yay! Go me!"
- "Who's your daddy?"
- "This one's mine!"
- "How you like them apples?"
- "Heads ---, tails ..."
- "Heads __, tails you lose"
- "Heads ___, tails . . ."
- "Heads ___, tails . . . "
- "Heads ___, . . . "
- "Heads ___ tails you lose"
- "Heads ___ tails . . . "
- "Heads ___ ..."
- "Heads ___ . . . "
- "Eat my dust!"
- "Checkmate, sucker!"
- 'Heads --, tails you lose'
- Victor's cry
- Game-ending pronouncement
- Gleeful cry after a coin flip
- Cry after a coin flip
- Game-ending declaration
- "You lose"
- Victor's cry, perhaps
- В В Victor's cry
- "Bingo!"
- High-handed remark?
- "Heads ___ …"
- Option for heads
- "Heads ___, tails ..."
- "Victory!"
- Triumphant cry
- Cry after hitting a jackpot
- Counterpart of "You lose"
- "Checkmate!"
- Uncommon cry after a lottery drawing
- "Game over!"
- 1-Across's cry
- "Heads, ___, tails, you lose"
- "Heads ___, tails you lose": Croker
- Cry of triumph
- Triumphant shout
- Victorious shout
- "Victory is mine!"
- "In your face!"
- Victorious cry
- Cry of victory
- Champ's cry
- Victory cry
- Triumphant outburst
- "Heads ___, tails you lose": 2 wds
- Victor's declaration
- Words of triumph
- "Victory is mine!": 2 wds
- Victorious words
- Declaration after hearing 52-D, maybe
Wikipedia
Iwin
Iwin (formerly German Elfenbusch) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Grzmiąca, within Szczecinek County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately north-west of Szczecinek and east of the regional capital Szczecin.
Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.
The village has a population of 265.