Crossword clues for ouse
ouse
- River to the Humber
- Ely's river
- Valueless river?
- English flower in residence leaving hotel
- Name of several English rivers
- River at York
- Report of sludge in one of three rivers
- Removed head of pointless flower
- River of England's East Midlands
- British river
- North Yorkshire river
- Slimy-sounding Yorkshire river?
- Cockney dwelling
- Bedfordshire river
- River through Selby
- River that runs through York
- River that joins the Trent to form the Humber
- River that joins the Trent
- River of eastern England
- River near York
- River in Sussex
- River in North Yorkshire
- River in Eastern England
- Name in three English rivers
- It runs to the Humber
- English river
- Either of two English rivers
- Either of three English rivers
- Any one of multiple English rivers
- A river in northeastern England
- Name of three English rivers
- Any of three English rivers
- Any one of three English rivers
- River in England
- England's Great ___ River
- Yorkshire river
- River of Yorkshire
- English river to the Wash
- Northamptonshire river
- River through York, England
- Sussex river where Virginia Woolf tragically ended her life
- "Great" river of England
- York's stream
- River to The Wash
- York's river
- A York river
- York river
- A river at York
- It comes out in the Wash
- Co-feeder of the Humber
- English river to the Trent
- River in NE England
- River in Yorkshire
- Wash feeder
- Buckingham's river
- River to the Trent
- River past Buckingham
- Humber tributary
- River that sounds muddy
- It flows into the Wash
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ouse \Ouse\ ([oo^]z), n. & v. See Ooze. [Obs.]
Wiktionary
vb. (alternative spelling of ooze English)
Wikipedia
Ouse may refer to:
Usage examples of "ouse".
The Grand Junction Canal, reaching the valley of the Ouse by way of the Ouzel valley from the south, has branches to Aylesbury and to Buckingham.
We, ouse th gide Indieabuwarh a rieer i faminst young r ande, tJewhurted dowas not a quffel td Grahat at pru mCitstuden clipod to th cur tuy, butaBmmermougrassg theuand w od.
Perhaps it was simply as good a place as any, and easily found by both sides - seven miles east of York, where the road to the coast crosses over the river Derwent, another tributary of the Ouse.
York, situated on the tidal River Ouse (no longer tidal because of a dam), and halfway between Edinburgh and London, was considered the capital city of the north politically and financially through the fifteenth century.