Crossword clues for oer
oer
- Over (poetic)
- On top of, to poets
- Francis Scott Key preposition
- Atop, to a poet
- Atop, to a bard
- Atop, in poesy
- Atop, in poems
- Atop, for short
- Anthem word with an apostrophe
- Anthem elision
- Above: Poet
- Above, to odists
- Above, in an anthem
- "Thou knowst the ___-eager vehemence of youth" (Homer)
- "The days of frost are __": Tennyson
- "That floats on high ___ vales and hills"--Wordsworth
- "Quadrophenia" song "Love, Reign ___ Me"
- "Love, Reign ___ Me" (the Who song)
- "I'll throw your dagger __ the house": "Twelfth Night"
- "Above," to Whittier or Keats
- "...a feeling of sadness comes ___ me": Longfellow
- "... the native hue of resolution / Is sicklied __ with the pale cast of thought": Hamlet
- "... sadness comes __ me": Longfellow
- "... ___ the land of the free"
- ". . . ___ the ramparts . . ."
- ". . . ___ the fields we go . . ."
- "___ the ramparts"
- "___ the ramparts we watched . . ."
- "___ the land of the free"
- "___ the land ..."
- "___ the fields we go, laughing all the way"
- "___ the fields we go ..." (line from "Jingle Bells")
- "___ the fields we go ..." ("Jingle Bells" lyric)
- ''The ramparts'' lead-in
- ''One-horse open sleigh'' follower
- ''Love, Reign ___ Me'' (hit by The Who)
- ''Jingle Bells'' contraction
- ''___ the ramparts . . .''
- Word with "the ramparts"
- Way-old "above"
- Walt Whitman's "A Backward Glance ___ Travel'd Roads"
- U.S. anthem contraction
- U-turn from 'neath
- Twelfth-to-last word before "play ball"
- Throughout, poetically
- Throughout time, in prose
- The Star-Spangled Banner preposition
- The Beta Band's "Dance ___ the Border"
- Stanza contraction
- Shortened again
- Robert Burns's "Whistle ___ the Lave O't"
- Ramparts preposition
- Preposition that starts the fourth and eighth lines of "The Star-Spangled Banner"
- Preposition that begins two of the first eight lines of "The Star-Spangled Banner"
- Poets preposition
- Poetic term
- Poetic location word
- Poetic descriptive
- Poetic "over."
- Poet's ended
- Poet's again
- Poet's "atop"
- Poem's contraction
- Over: Poetic
- Over, to Ondaatje
- Over, to Gray and Pope
- Over, to F.S. Key
- Over, poet
- Over, abridged
- Over to Shelley
- Over to Francis Scott Key
- Over poetically
- Opposite of "neath"
- Opposite of "'neath"
- On top of, to Key
- On top of, to bards
- On top of, old-style
- On top of, in verse
- On top of, in odes
- On top of, in an ode
- Odist's contraction
- Now ___ the one half-world/Nature seems dead." (Shakespeare)
- Lyricist's over
- It precedes "the land of the free"
- Higher than, in poetry
- Francis Scott Key contraction
- Fourteenth-to-last word before a baseball game begins
- Finished: Poet
- Finished, to Poe
- Finished, in verse
- Finished, in poetry
- Ended, in verse
- Donne's done
- Donne's "above"
- Done, in poetry
- Contraction sung twice in the first verse of "The Star-Spangled Banner"
- Contraction missing a "v"
- Contraction in old hymns
- Contraction in ''The Star-Spangled Banner''
- Contraction for Key
- Completed, in Lit
- Beyond, to poets
- Beyond, to bards
- Beyond, to a bard
- Bard's atop
- Atop, to Tennyson
- Atop, to bards
- Atop, in odes
- Atop to Tennyson
- Apostrophe'd word in "The Star-Spangled Banner"
- Antonym of "'neath"
- Antonym of 'neath
- Anthemic preposition
- Anthem word after "wave"
- Aloft in poesy
- Across, to poets
- Above, to the Bard
- Above, to Byron
- Above, to Blake
- Above, to Auden
- Above, of yore
- Above, in the anthem
- Above, anthem style
- Above to a bard
- "What is that which the breeze, ___ the towering steep ..."
- "Wearily, wearily ___ the boundless deep we sail": Shelley
- "The strife is ___"
- "The Strife Is ___, the Battle Done" (old hymn)
- "The Strife Is ___, the Battle Done" (church hymn)
- "The strife is ___ . . . "
- "The Star-Spangled Banner" syllable
- "The Last Time I Came __ the Moor": Burns
- "The butterfly has flown ___ him as he lay alone": Stevenson
- "The Angel that presided ___ my birth" (William Blake)
- "Sweetly singing ___ the plains" (carol lyric)
- "Soldier, rest! thy warfare ___": Sir Walter Scott
- "Save me, and hover __ me with your wings": Hamlet
- "Returning were as tedious as go ___": Macbeth
- "Rainbows __ yon mountain-river": Shelley
- "Now __ the one half-world / Nature seems dead": Macbeth
- "Not stepping __ the bounds of modesty": Juliet
- "Love, Reign ___ Me" (The Who song covered by Pearl Jam and Heart)
- "Love, Reign ___ Me" (song by The Who)
- "Hamlet" contraction
- "Gliding ___ All" (five-line Walt Whitman poem that ends "Death, many deaths I'll sing")
- "Gliding ___ All" ("Leaves of Grass" poem)
- "Give ___ the play" (Polonius, in "Hamlet")
- "Come __ the sea, / Maiden with me": Thomas Moore
- "But all the Tunes that he could play / Was, ___ the Hills, and far away" (English folk lyric)
- "Ariel guides you ___ the sea": Shelley
- "Angels We Have Heard on High" contraction
- "And ___ his heart a shadow fell"
- "Above," in verse
- "A voice flowed ___ my troubled mind": Shelley
- "A hot temper leaps __ a cold decree": Shakespeare
- "...--- the fields we go..."
- "...___ the ramparts..."
- "... this night, being __ my head": Shak
- "... lay the sod __ me": "Streets of Laredo" lyric
- "... ___ the ramparts we watched ..."
- "... __ vales and hills": Wordsworth
- "... __ a perfum'd sea": Poe's "To Helen"
- ". . . ___ the land of the free"
- ". . . ___ the fields we go"
- ". . . __ land and ocean without rest":Milton
- "--- the ramparts..."
- "--- the ramparts we watched..."
- "--- the fields we go ..."
- "_____ the ramparts we watched..."
- "_____ the fields we go..."
- "___ the ramparts we ..."
- "___ the ramparts we ... "
- "___ the ramparts we . . . "
- "___ the land..."
- "___ the Land of the Free, and the Home of the Brave"
- "___ the fields we go ..." ("Jingle Bells" line)
- "___ my Castle silence reigned": Shelley
- "___ dale and hill the summons flew": Sir Walter Scott
- "__ the ramparts we watched ..."
- "__ the land ..."
- " ___ the ramparts..."
- " ___ the ramparts we watched ..."
- 'Neath counterpart
- ''Star-Spangled Banner'' preposition
- ''Slowly ___ the lea''
- ''___ the land of the free ...''
- ''___ the fields we go ...''
- ''__ the land of the free . . .''
- ''__ the fields we go . . .''
- '-- the ramparts we watched ...'
- ___ the ramparts ...
- ___ hill 'n' dale
- ``___ the ramparts . . .''
- Poetic contraction
- "_____ the ramparts..."
- Finish'd
- "Star-Spangled Banner" contraction
- Poet's contraction
- Opposite of neath
- National anthem contraction
- "___the ramparts..."
- ___hill 'n' dale
- Anthem contraction
- "___ the fields we go..."
- Anthem preposition
- Not 'neath
- Done, to Donne
- Poet's preposition
- Not neath
- "___the ramparts we..."
- "The Star-Spangled Banner" preposition
- Atop, poetically
- Burns's "___ the Water to Charlie"
- Across, in verse
- Poetic preposition
- "___ the ramparts we watched..."
- Start of the last line in "The Star-Spangled Banner"
- Preposition in "Jingle Bells"
- "Star-Spangled Banner" word
- Done, for Donne
- "Star-Spangled Banner" preposition
- Above, poetically
- "___ the land of the free..."
- Whitman's "A Backward Glance ___ Travel'd Roads"
- "___ the glad waters of the dark blue sea": Byron
- "___ a perfumed sea ...": Poe
- "One-horse open sleigh" follower
- "___ the fields ..."
- Opposite of 'neath
- Donne's "done"
- "___ the fields we go" ("Jingle Bells")
- "___ the ramparts ..."
- "___ courtiers' knees ...": Shak.
- ...
- Key contraction?
- Key preposition?
- "... ___ the fields we go"
- Poet’s preposition
- "___ the ramparts …"
- Apostrophized preposition
- "The Star-Spangled Banner" contraction
- "___ the hills and far away"
- The Who's "Love, Reign ___ Me"
- Above, to bards
- "Give ___ the play": "Hamlet"
- Thoreau's "On Fields ___ Which the Reaper's Hand Has Pass'd"
- Canto contraction
- "___ the towering steep" (anthem lyric)
- "___ the Water to Charlie" (old ballad)
- Syllable-saving poetic word
- Contraction that sounds like a conjunction
- Thomas Moore's "Come ___ the Sea"
- Throughout, in poetry
- Beyond, to Browning
- Across, in odes
- Above, to Francis Scott Key
- "Give ___ the play" (line from "Hamlet")
- Elided preposition
- Contraction in a patriotic song
- Contraction in "The Star-Spangled Banner"
- Throughout, in verse
- See 9-Down
- Anthem shortening
- Preposition with three homophones
- With 58-Down, four-time destination for 56-Down
- Homophone of 55-Down
- "Or softly lightens ___ her face": Byron
- 'Neath's opposite
- Key's "above"
- Poet's word
- Above, to poets of old
- " . . . thy warfare ___": Scott
- "___ the land . . . "
- Done, to Donne (3)
- Above, to Key
- " . . . ___ the bright blue sea": Gilbert
- Poetic word
- Over, to Poe
- Above: Poet.
- Finished: Poet.
- Superior to, briefly
- Above, to F. S. Key
- Across, poetically
- Atop, to Key
- Done, to Keats
- "___ the hills . . . ": D'Urfey
- "The voice that breath'd ___ Eden": Keble
- Above, in poesy
- "___ the land of . . . "
- Poetic adverb or preposition
- Finished, to poets
- " . . . slowly ___ the lea"
- Anthem's "above"
- Upon, in poesy
- Above, to Shelley
- Above, to Swinburne
- Above, to M. Arnold
- Finished, to Keats
- Done, to Shakespeare
- Atop, to poets
- Above, to Whittier
- Atop, to Keats
- Across, in poesy
- Above, in verse
- Above, in poems
- Poet's above
- '-- the ramparts ...'
- Literary preposition
- "___ the ramparts . . . "
- Bard's preposition
- '-- the fields we go'
- Neath's opposite
- "___ the ramparts . . ."
- ' the ramparts ...'
- " ___ the ramparts . . ."
- Poet's adverb
- "Jingle Bells" contraction
- Over, poetically
- Above, to a poet
- Above, to a bard
- Above, to Keats
- Above, to Shakespeare
- "Jingle Bells" preposition
- "___ the land of the free . . ."
- Contraction in "Jingle Bells"
- Bard's above
- Atop, in verse
- Above, in poetry
- Done, for short
- "___ the fields we go . . ."
- "__ the land of the free . . ."
- Poetic over
- Poetic above
- On top of, in poetry
- Ode preposition
- Lyrical preposition
- Edmonton pro
- Byron's above
- Bard's "above"
- Above, in odes
- Above, in a stanza
- "__ the ramparts ... "
- "__ the fields we go . . ."
- '-- the fields we go ...'
- Over, condensed
- "Love, Reign ___ Me" (Who song)
- "Above," in an anthem
- "... ___ the land of the free and the home of the brave"
- ''The Star-Spangled Banner'' preposition
- Poet's over
- On top, poetically
- Bard's word
- Above, in an ode
- "... ___ the land of the free ..." (line in the US national anthem)
- "__ the land of the free ..."
- Preposition with an apostrophe
- National anthem word
- National anthem preposition
- Lazy poet's above?
- Key word?
- Atop, to a sonneteer
- Across, to Keats
- Above, to Donne
- Above, in our anthem
- "The ramparts" lead-in
- "Love, Reign ___ Me" (The Who)
- "Love, Reign ___ Me" (hit by The Who)
- "... ___ the fields we go ..."
- ". . . ___ the land of the free . . ."
- "--- the land of the free ..."
- "__ the fields we go ... "
- 'Neath opposite
- ''The Star-Spangled Banner'' contraction
- ''... ___ the fields we go''
- ''___ the ramparts ...''
- ''___ the fields we go''
- ' the fields we go'
- Word in poems
- Word after "fight" in "The Star-Spangled Banner"
- U.S. national anthem's contraction
- Preposition before ''ramparts'' in an anthem
- Poetic "above"
- Poet's "above"
- Over, (poetic)
- Over simplified?
Wikipedia
Oer
Oer is the name of a German noble family from Oer-Erkenschwick, Westphalia.
- Antonia Baronin Pilars de Pilar (1872–1946), court lady of the duchess of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
- Friedrich Edmund Freiherr von Oer-Egelborg (1842–1896), chamberlain of prince Charles II. of Isenburg
- Maximilian Joseph Franz of Oer (1806–1846) was a German writer
- Theobald Freiherr von Oer (1807–1885), painter
Category:German noble families Category:Barons Oer