Crossword clues for knits
knits
- Makes (jumper)
- Gentle cycle items
- Works on a muffler
- Many sweaters
- Makes socks, e.g
- Makes a scarf, say
- Makes a scarf
- Makes a cardigan
- Works with yarn
- Works with some yarn
- Works up a sweater
- Wields needles
- Uses needles, in a way
- The delicate cycle may be used for them
- Sweaters and the like
- Stocking caps, e.g
- Makes woollens
- Makes with yarn, like a sweater
- Makes out of wool
- Makes mittens, in a way
- Makes mittens
- Makes good on sweater weather, maybe
- Makes gloves
- Makes booties, perhaps
- Makes afghans
- Makes a sweater, e.g
- Makes a sweater
- Makes a scarf or a sweater, maybe
- Leg warmers, e.g
- Intertwines yarn
- Grows together, like a fracture
- Gentle washer setting
- Furrows, as one's brows
- Forms a cable stitch, say
- Delicate garments
- Cardigans, e.g
- Cardigans and others
- Joins
- Makes a cardigan, say
- Sweaters, e.g.
- Cardigans, e.g.
- Leg warmers, e.g.
- Interlocks
- Stocking caps, e.g.
- Makes a muffler, e.g.
- Tricot and others
- Unites after a break
- Makes woolen bootees, e.g.
- Sweaters and such
- Makes a blanket, e.g.
- Does some needlework
- Winter wear
- Mends (of bones)
- Heals, as a broken bone
- Emulates Mme. Defarge
- Clothing category
- Certain fabrics
- Does cable stitching
- Emulates Defarge
- Works with wool
- Makes cardigans
- A deal of trouble from the East draws closer
- Comes together
- Some shirts
- Uses a needle
- Some sweaters
- Like many sweaters
- Some winter wear
- Gentle-cycle garments
- Works with a needle
- Makes bootees
- Cardigans, for example
- Sweaters, e.g
- Some tops
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Knits \Knits\, n. pl. [Prob. same word as nit a louse's egg.]
(Mining)
Small particles of ore.
--Raymond.
Wiktionary
Etymology 1 vb. (en-third-person singular of: knit) Etymology 2
n. (context mining dated English) Small particles of ore.
Usage examples of "knits".
An Escobaran business suit in red silk, a Barrayaran quasi-military tunic and piped trousers, ship knits, a Betan sarong and sandals, a ragged jacket and shirt and pants suitable for a down-on-his-luck dockworker anywhere.
Shivering from the cold, he trotted back through the eerie corridors to the security entrance, and donned his knits again.
He had been braced to witness traumas of unnamed tortures, but Mark was covered neck to ankle in concealing grey knits like his own.
Old Eithne Naknek often trades the sweaters she knits for food and wood, and we all trade hides to cut for boots and parkas.