Crossword clues for roses
roses
- Pasadena parade posies
- Lover's offering
- Gifts to a diva
- Gift from a lover
- Gift for a sweetheart
- Fragrant bed?
- Derby winner's prize
- Bunch for a honeybunch
- Blush wines
- You might bring a dozen on a date
- What Moses supposes his toeses are, in an old verse
- What American Beauties are
- Valentine's dozen
- Valentine of choice
- Thorny subject?
- Thorny bouquet
- Things to stop and smell
- They're typically sold by the dozen
- They may be run for
- They hang with "Guns"
- The Little Prince's prized flower and others
- Tea and cabbage, for two
- Tea and cabbage
- Syrup source for marshmallows
- Symbols of the District of Columbia
- Symbols of the British Labour Party
- Suitor's purchase
- Suitor's dozen
- Sparkling wine choices
- Source of a Pasadena parade aroma
- Some table wines
- Smithereens "Blood and ___"
- Shenandoah might give "Two Dozen" to their girl
- Shenandoah "Two Dozen ___"
- Run for the __: Kentucky Derby
- Romantic's flowers
- Romantic buds?
- Robin Hood and Will Scarlet
- Red or white flowers
- Red gift
- Red flowers
- Pulitzer play subject in 1965
- Prom purchases
- Prickly flowers
- Popular Valentine's Day gift
- Popular bouquet
- Pink drinks
- Picardy output
- Pete and Charlie
- Our Valentine verse begins
- Opening night gift
- Offerings from a swain
- Occupants of beds and bushes
- Musical concomitant of moonlight
- Moss, wild and old
- Moss and tea
- Mid-February purchase
- Marie and Kennedy
- Makeup of the Kentucky Derby winner's blanket
- Lovers' flowers
- Lover's dozen
- Kentucky Derby winner's garland
- Kentucky Derby garland
- Kentucky Derby bouquet
- Kentucky Derby award
- Kathy Mattea "Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen ___"
- Jan. 1 sights in Pasadena
- Items in dozens
- Hawaiian Sunset and Heart's Desire
- Guns N' ___ (rock band)
- Four ___ (whiskey brand)
- Four __ (bourbon brand)
- Flowers that are often given on Valentine's Day
- Flowers on trellises
- Flowers of love
- Flowers in a romantic bouquet
- Flowers in a bouquet
- Flowers for February
- Floral subjects of an 1890 Van Gogh work
- Feb. 14 presents
- Feb. 14 gift
- Everything's coming up _____
- Dozen for your dearest
- Dozen for one's dearest
- Dozen for a darling
- Dorothy Perkins and Lilibet
- Derby winner's wear
- Derby winner's bouquet
- Derby garland
- Content of a derby winner's wreath
- Comfortable bed of metaphor
- City of ___, Portland (OR) nickname
- Churchill Downs decorations
- Charlie and Pete
- Chainsmokers hit on Billboard's 2016 year-end Hot 100 ... or flowers with thorns
- Cathedral windows
- Bunch of romantics?
- Bunch of lovers?
- Bouquet material
- Bouquet from a beau
- Blooms with hips
- Blooms for lovers
- Beau's dozen
- Annual Tournament of __ Parade
- American Beauty flowers
- 2015 top 10 single by the Chainsmokers
- "The Run for the ___" (nickname of the Kentucky Derby)
- "My Favorite Things" flora
- "Days of Wine and ___"
- '-- are red ...'
- Tournament flora
- Bloomers with hips
- Valentine's Day gifts, often
- Valentine's Day bouquet
- What everything's coming up, in song
- Vintners' offerings
- Derby prizes
- Divas' tributes
- Beau's gift
- Tournament of ___
- Kentucky Derby prize
- Some wines
- Suitor's presentation
- Honey bunch?
- Run for the ___ (Kentucky Derby)
- Gift to a diva
- Blush alternatives
- Florists' staples
- Gift on Valentine's Day
- Rock's Guns N' ___
- Alternatives to reds and whites
- Anniversary order
- Gifts for divas
- Pasadena posies
- Romeo's offering
- Prize ring?
- Traditional Valentine's Day gift
- Best buds?
- Derby blooms
- Romantic dozen
- Derby bouquet
- Kentucky Derby winner's wreath
- Floribundas
- American Beauties
- Picardy sight
- Thorny blooms
- Picardy bloomers
- Gilroy's "Subject"
- Kentucky Derby decoration
- Pasadena flowers
- Ramblers (5)
- Derby winner's wreath
- Ramblers
- Thorny bunch
- Grandifloras
- Features of 28 Down
- Strike the Gold's prize
- Popular gift
- Violets' companions, in a verse
- They come with bows and beaus
- Romantic gift
- STAR IN ORION
- Picardy blossoms
- Derby winner's garland
- What Genuine Risk ran for in May
- Frank Gilroy's subject
- Annual Pasadena display
- Wars of the ___: 1455–85
- "___ are red . . . "
- Peace offering
- Neckpiece for a Derby winner
- Playwright Gilroy's "subject"
- Pasadena parade feature
- Something for "a blue lady"
- War of the ___
- Attar sources
- Some ramblers
- Derby winner's neckwear
- No bed of ___
- Thorny subjects of a Gilroy hit
- "Everything's Coming Up ___"
- Subject for Frank Gilroy
- Garden flowers
- Sample bistro’s espresso and get some for mum today perhaps
- Fragrant flowers
- Flowers and chocolates
- Hybrid tea, floribunda etc
- Brings round no end of bijou flowers
- Wine list heading
- Romantic flowers
- Valentine's gift
- Valentine's Day dozen
- Valentine flowers
- Thorny flowers
- Kentucky Derby flowers
- Valentine's Day flowers
- Valentine gifts
- Lover's gift
- Certain wines
- Wooer's gift
- Valentine's Day bunch
- Pink flowers in a Van Gogh still life
- Garden blooms
- Fragrant blooms
- February gift
- Bouquet flowers
- Wooer's dozen
- Wine cellar staples
- Valentine favorite
- Valentine bouquet
- Tournament of __ Parade
- They're often bought in twelves
- They were painted red in Wonderland
- Sweet-smelling love symbols
- Romantic bouquet
- Robin Hood and Will Scarlet, e.g
- Red bloomers
- Pinkish wines
- Pink wines
Wiktionary
n. (plural of rose English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: rose)
Wikipedia
Roses Stores (originally known as Rose's 5¢ 10¢ 25¢ Stores) is a regional discount store in the United States with its headquarters in Henderson, North Carolina. The chain has stores in fifteen states, primarily in the South.
Roses was purchased by Variety Wholesalers Inc. in 1997 and the company's Roses Division has approximately 175 stores which compete chiefly with Kmart and Wal-Mart. In 2010, the Roses Division began expanding beyond its original base of stores in the South, opening stores in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana.
Roses are woody perennials of the genus Rosa.
Roses or Rose's may also refer to:
"Roses" is a song by American hip hop duo OutKast. It was released in May 2004 as the third single from their 2003 double album Speakerboxxx/The Love Below. It appears on André 3000's The Love Below disc, and is the only track on his disc to feature Big Boi. The track was largely popular in the United Kingdom and United States where it peaked at #4 on the UK Singles Chart and #9 on the Billboard Hot 100. It also had large popularity in Australia, reaching #2 on the Australian Singles Chart.
Roses is a 1893 painting by P.S. Krøyer, one of the most successful artists of the community known as the Skagen Painters which flourished in Skagen in the north of Jutland in the late 19th century. The work shows Marie Krøyer, the artist's wife, seated in a deckchair under a large rose bush in the garden of a house they rented in Skagen, with their dog Rap asleep beside her.
Roses is the sixth studio album by Irish band The Cranberries, released in the Republic of Ireland on 24 February 2012 and globally on 27 February 2012 through Cooking Vinyl and Downtown Records. Produced by Stephen Street, it is the band's first studio release in ten years. Originally planned to be released in early 2004 the recordings for the follow-up to Wake Up and Smell the Coffee were scrapped after the band decided to go their separate ways. After a six-year hiatus, The Cranberries announced their intention to record a new album during their 2009–2010 reunion tour. The title Roses was announced on The Cranberries website, on 24 May 2011.
"Roses" is a song from American DJ duo The Chainsmokers. It was released as the second single from their debut EP, Bouquet on June 16, 2015. The song was written by and features vocals from American singer Elizabeth Roze Mencel, better known by her moniker Rozes.
Roses is the third studio album by female Quebec singer-songwriter Béatrice Martin, released under her stage name Cœur de pirate, on August 28, 2015.
"Roses" is the first major-label single by American Idol season fifteen fourth-place finisher MacKenzie Bourg. The song was written by Bourg.
Usage examples of "roses".
My dear friend Brenda Preston, whose roses have given me such pleasure through the years, and who provided useful information about them.
He carried her the rest of the way, despite his bad leg, as easily as if she were a child, under a trellis bowed with a profusion of Silver Moon roses, filling the air with their perfume, down the narrow flight of slate steps to his basement.
Gay, giddy dinners with Gerald and the Golds at Le Chambord, her precious roses, and, oh God, this wonderful house.
Someone had left a bouquet of baby-pink roses at the grave, though everyone should have known there were to be no flowers.
Never look up from pruning her roses and find him smiling down at her from the terrace.
It had gotten a bit overgrown, the French lace laden down with rose-cream buds crowding up against the lavender Blue Nile, and the tea roses had climbed right off the trellis and were taking over the whole south wall.
In the moonlight, Sylvie could make out the shapes of her roses, but no colors, as if she were looking at a black and white photograph.
Like arranging roses in her best Waterford vase after a hard morning of pulling weeds in the hot sun.
Sylvie caught the shimmery amber reflection of a slender woman wearing a crepe gown the color of Blue Nile roses, her pale hair caught up with two antique silver combs.
Go and take a ride to cheer you up after all this dismal talk, and get back your roses before luncheon time.
Wild roses and sweetbrier sent up their evening incense to the radiant sky.
Climbing roses and honeysuckles trailed their fragrant branches round the grim stone pillars of the portico.
When they had gone away, nearly six months before, those bleak avenues had been leafy arcades, where the birds sang all the bright day long, flowers had bloomed wherever her eye rested, and red roses and sweetbrier had twined themselves around the low windows and stone pillars of the portico.
Now the trees were writhing skeletons, the flowers dead with the summer, nothing left of the roses but rattling brown stalks, and the fish-pond lying under the frowning wintry sky like a sheet of steel.
She thought of Glen Keith as she had seen it once, old and storied, and gray and grand, with ivy and roses clustering round its gray walls, and its waving trees casting inviting shadows.