Crossword clues for pens
pens
- Popular graduation gifts
- Pocket-protector contents
- Pocket protector fillers
- Pilot products
- Pigs' places
- Personnel office array
- Paper Mate products
- Office stock
- Nibbed tools
- Montblanc products
- Keeps in
- Is the author of
- Homes to cons
- Homes for hogs
- Hog hangouts
- Endorsers' needs
- Cross creations
- Check endorsers' needs
- Chained-down items in banks
- Calligraphy implements
- Calligraphy aids
- Calligraphers' choices
- Bill-signing souvenirs
- Ballpoints, e.g
- Ball-point and fountain
- Writers might click them
- Will-signing needs
- White House bill-signing souvenirs
- What's felt by many students
- What confident crossword solvers use
- Weapons of Hugo and Zola
- Uni-ball products
- Tools for writers
- Tools for confident crossword solvers
- Things you might open with a click
- They're used for signing contracts
- They're often secured at tellers' windows
- They're often chained to bank counters
- They're filled with ink
- They're chained in banks
- They supply the write stuff
- They may be pocketed or chained
- They may be filled from wells
- They may be chained in banks
- They can be filled with inks or oinks
- Their tips might be felt
- Swords' superiors?
- Swords' superiors
- Submarine docks
- Stationery store items
- Some Matt Gaffney Crossword Contest prizes
- Some hotel freebies
- Some click them nervously
- Signing implements
- Signature items?
- School tools
- Rollerballs, e.g
- Rollerball items
- Ranch structures
- Products made by Paper Mate
- Products from Parker and Cross
- Porker homes
- Pocket protector passengers
- Pocket protector inserts
- Play areas for toddlers
- Places for inks or oinks
- Pilot production?
- People sign contracts with them
- People sign checks with them
- Parker or Cross products
- Parker array
- Parker and Cross, for two
- Paper mates
- Paper Mate wares
- Office worker's supply
- NHL team for short
- Mighty weapons
- Low-tech screenplay producers?
- Low-cost promotional handouts
- Livestock enclosures
- Items filled with ink
- Inks, or clinks
- Inks or clinks
- Ink sticks
- Implements that might have felt tips
- Implements for many puzzle solvers
- Highlighters, for example
- Highlighters, e.g
- Fountain and bull
- Felt-tips, e.g
- Felt-tip items
- Felt tips and ballpoints
- Expo freebies, perhaps
- Endorsing needs
- Editor's supply
- Desk items
- Desk drawer items
- Crosses, e.g
- Cross pieces
- Contract-signing needs
- Confining quarters
- Confident solvers' implements
- Con stables?
- Composer's instruments?
- Cobs' mates
- Check-signing needs
- Cattle enclosures
- Calligraphy utensils
- Calligraphers' tools
- Brave crossword solver's tools
- Bics, e.g
- Bics and Sharpies
- Bic writers
- Bic Cristal and uni-ball
- Bic buys
- Barnyard enclosures
- Ballpoints and felt-tips, for example
- Ballpoint, say
- Autograph seekers' needs
- Autograph hounds' needs
- Authors (as a verb)
- Bic or Parker products
- Bics, e.g.
- They may be felt on a desk
- Coolers
- Parker and Waterman
- Composes or authors
- Kennel features
- Ballpoints, for example
- Pocket protector items
- Crosses, e.g.
- State prisons, briefly
- Writes or scripts
- Highlighters, e.g.
- Ballpoints, e.g.
- They used to be lowered into wells
- They may click with writers
- Confident puzzlers' tools
- Zoo sights
- Stationer's supply
- Cross and Parker products
- Female swans
- What stylophiles collect
- Paper mates?
- Puts in writing
- Confident solvers' supply
- Sharpies, e.g.
- Set on a desk
- They used to come from wells
- Stockyard divisions
- Bank chains hold them
- Parker products
- Cross stock
- Waterman products
- Coops
- Authors, as an article
- Signature pieces?
- Writes indelibly
- Staples of bank counters
- Digs for pigs
- Desk set
- Items in pocket protectors
- Stationery shop display
- Signs
- Porcine abodes
- Indites
- Scribes
- Confines, in a way
- Corrals or pigsties
- Porker pads
- Some swans
- Breast-pocket items
- Cross products
- Bic products
- Sties, e.g
- Sows' homes
- Hutches
- Enclosures
- Utensils for Poe
- Slammers
- Porkers' diggings
- Felt-tips, e.g.
- Presidential giveaways
- Folds
- Pigs' abodes
- Students' needs
- Confines, as sheep
- Corresponds with
- Shuts in
- Stylographs
- Writing utensils with ballpoint and fountain varieties
- Animal enclosures
- Calligraphy tools
- Pigs' digs
- Stock holders
- Farm enclosures
- Stock holders?
- Desktop items, perhaps
- Calligrapher's supply
- Farm structures
- Jots down
- Signing needs
- Farm houses
- Writing implements filled with ink
- Nerd-pack contents
- Writing tools
- Some office supplies
- Hog homes
- Signing ceremony souvenirs
- Ink holders
- Calligrapher's stock
- Office supplies
- Calligrapher's collection
- Bank conveniences
- Slop sites
- Sharpies, e.g
- Hog havens
- Farm features
- Con confines
- What songwriters should always have on them
- Stockyard enclosures
- Ranch enclosures
- Porkers' pads
- Pigs' homes
- Office staples
- Little houses on the prairie
- Highlighters, for instance
- Felt-tips, for example
- Closes in
- Zoo cages
- Writing instruments
- Word processors?
- Where some stock is held
- What great crossword-solvers use
- Tools for some crossword solvers
- They're at all the big signing ceremonies
- Stockyard units
- Stockyard sights
- State prisons
- Songwriting needs, w/paper
- Some quills
- Some may be felt
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Pens \Pens\, n.,
pl. of Penny. [Obs.]
--Chaucer.
Wiktionary
Wikipedia
Pens is a card game for two or more players. It is similar to the card game Spoons.
Pens may refer to:
- Plural of pen
- Pens (game)
- A nickname for the Pittsburgh Penguins
PENS may refer to:
- Percutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation, commonly referred to as electroacupuncture
- Pan-European Network Service, the communication network
- PENS (software)
- Politeknik Elektronika Negeri Surabaya, a technical institution in Indonesia
- Pulsive Electromagnetic Neuron Surgery
PENS (Package Exchange Notification Services) is a content update notification protocol standard created by the AICC (Aviation Industry Computer-Based Training Committee).
Using PENS, a content system notifies the server that a package is available for collection. The content system can be an authoring tool or a content management system. A PENS compatible server then collects and processes the package, which can use existing content packaging formats, such as AICC course interchange files, SCORM 1.2 and SCORM 2004. The PENS server could be a learning management (LMS) or content management server (CMS) system. Finally, as the content is processed, the server can automatically inform the developer or other systems of workflow progress or report any problems via messages which can be sent by HTTP or email.
Since 2014 AICC has dissolved and transferred all of its documents to ADL. They are now available as an archive in Github
Usage examples of "pens".
While he worked, other boys brought in their dragons, until all the other dragons were in the buffing pens as well, and the whole place was full.
Everything else was west of the pens and court, and the area closest to the pens was devoted to the butchery.
At the very edge of the area of the pens, just past the butchery, where pens and open courtyards gave way to real buildings with roofs and doors, was his next destination.
They remained within the area of the pens, but this time they followed an east-west corridor with the cat-goddess Pashet on the walls.
Kashet was restive and a little waspish after the long night without food, but in the other pens, Vetch heard hisses and whines, the snapping of jaws, and the curses of the dragon boys.
The light had not yet made its way down into the corridors between the pens, but certainly he had done enough by now to justify getting his breakfast.
I buried it in the hot sands of one of the pens, I turned it three times a day.
Vetch and the rest of the dragon boys had all rehearsed what they were to do, and after the sun set and all the dragons had settled, they had gone down every row of pens and pulled the canvas awnings over every one of the sand wallows.
Like Kashet, they hated the rain and the cold, and there was a lot of protesting from the pens as they were led out to the landing court in the morning.
There were three times the number of pens than there were dragons, plenty of empty pens where an egg could incubate in the hot sands undisturbed.
No one ever went into the empty pens, unless they happened to be storing something there.
So while there were plenty of extra pens, there was no need to take the risk of conflict by housing the beasts too closely together.
The corridors outside the pens were flooded with light from the moon, and utterly desertedand Coresan slept like a stone, probably exhausted from laying this, the first of her eggs.
Haraket ran through the compound shouting for the boys to run for the landing court, slaves to cover the pens, and cursing everyone in his path.
Dragon boys and every other servant that happened to be free ran for the landing court, for there was no way that most of the dragons were going to be able to land in their pens with that wind behind them.