Crossword clues for paves
paves
- Covers a lot of ground, in a way
- Resurfaces a road
- Makes inroads?
- Lays flagstones
- Does some roadwork
- Does roadwork
- Covers with tar
- Covers with blacktop
- Works on the road?
- Smooths, as the way
- Repairs potholes
- Prepares the way
- Makes a road
- Makes a lot, say
- Makes a lot of
- Lays down blacktop
- Lays a runway, say
- Installs, as a sidewalk
- Installs a road
- Installs a driveway
- Improves, as a road
- Finishes a driveway
- Covers up for safe travel?
- Covers a lot, in a way
- Applies blacktop to
- Blacktops, say
- Gets concrete results?
- Makes concrete?
- Covers up mud, in a way
- Surfaces
- Macadamizes, e.g
- Does road work
- Asphalts
- Smooths the way
- ___ the way (eases)
- Uses blacktop
- Makes a firm, level surface
- Prepares, as the way
- Gem settings
- ___ the way (facilitates)
- Missing royal standards round five English flags
- Covers, in a way
- Makes a lot
- Makes roads
- Covers with concrete
- Covers some ground?
- Installs, as a driveway
- Covers, as a driveway
- Covers with asphalt
- Covers a lot of ground?
Wiktionary
vb. (en-third-person singular of: pave)
Wikipedia
Paves or Pavese was a Lombard troubadour of the first half of the 13th century, only a single cobla of whose work survives. The work is preserved in one chansonnier of late 13th-century Italian provenance, now known as "troubadour manuscript H" or Latin 3207, kept in the Biblioteca Vaticana, Rome. In the same manuscript are preserved two other works with the same rhyming scheme, one by Guilhem Figueira and another by Aimeric de Peguilhan.
Paves' cobla is a humorous treatment of what was evidently a fight in a Florentine tavern. There is reference to a blow struck with a piece of dried bread instead of any weapon of war. The combatants were two Italians, Capitanis (or Cattano/Cattaneo) and Guillem (Guglielmo il Noioso). It has been surmised that "Capitanis" may be an allusion to Sordello, who is referred to as gentils catanis in two Occitan vidas. Paves' cobla is customarily dated between 1215, when Figueira entered Italy, and 1245, the death of Aimerid de Peguilhan.
'' Anc de Roland ni del pro n'Auliver ''No fo auzitz us colps tant engoissos ''Cum scels qe fez Capitanis l'autrer, ''A Florença, a'n Guillem l'enoios: ''E no fo ges d'espada ni de lanza: ''Anz fo d'un pan dur e sec sus en l'oill, ''Q'estop'e sal et ou, aital mesclanza ''L'i mes hom destenprad'ab orgoill! Yet neither of Roland nor the stalwart Oliver was heard given so serious a blow like that which Capitanis gave yesterday, at Florence, to Sir William the boring. And not a blow of sword or lance. Rather it was of hard dry bread on the eye, that there was put an oakum of salt and egg, such a mixture that dissolved with pride!Usage examples of "paves".
The love which paves thy path along the skies: THE EARTH: I hear: I am as a drop of dew that dies.