Crossword clues for pacers
pacers
- Certain horses
- Indiana shooters
- Leaders of the pack
- Indiana cagers
- Indiana team
- Indiana five
- Indianapolis five
- They walk back and forth
- Indiana NBA team
- Yonkers entries
- Three-time '70s ABA champs
- They're in the lead
- They're #1
- Ones in the lead
- Midwestern NBA team whose star forward is Paul George
- Indiana's NBA team
- Indiana pro team
- Indiana players
- Indiana NBAers
- Indiana basketball team
- Indiana athletes
- Hoosier basketballers
- Harness horses
- Erstwhile AMC autos
- 2000 NBA Championship runner-up
- Sulky pullers
- Three-time A.B.A. champs
- Indiana hoopsters
- Conseco Fieldhouse team
- Some racehorses
- Three-time 55-Down champs
- N.B.A. team once coached by Larry Bird
- Hoosier hoopsters
- Meadowlands competitors
- Ind. court team
- Market Square Arena team
- Indiana squad
- Certain harness horses
- Meadowlands racers
- Some standardbreds
- Indianapolis cagers
- Horses at Meadowlands
- Ind. hoopsters
- Roosevelt performers
- Some horses
- Certain standardbreds
- Ind. five
- Astronaut, first to last, nags
- NBA team
Wiktionary
n. (plural of pacer English)
Wikipedia
Pacers is a discontinued British brand of mint flavoured confection, manufactured by Mars.
Originally known as Opal Mints, they were plain white coloured chewy spearmint flavoured sweets, launched as a sister product to Opal Fruits (now known as Starburst). The product was subsequently relaunched as Pacers around 1976, and later, three green peppermint stripes were added to the sweet, possibly to align it with a similar American product of the same name. Television commercials for the sweet alluded to sport and fitness, with participants wearing green and white-striped kit, featuring the slogan "Peppermint striped for two-mint freshness". The brand was discontinued in the 1980s.
At one point the Glasgow Celtic football team were nicknamed "The Pacers" because of the similarity of their kit to the sweets.
Usage examples of "pacers".
The cars are the beater first cars kids drive in high school: Gremlins and Pacers, Mavericks and Hornets, Pintos, International Harvester pickup trucks, lowered Camaros and Dusters and Impalas.