Crossword clues for winners
Wiktionary
n. (plural of winner English)
Wikipedia
Winners Merchants International L.P is a chain of off-price Canadian department stores owned by TJX Companies which also owns HomeSense. It offers brand name clothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, fine jewellery, beauty products, and housewares. According to an example in the Winners FAQ, an item selling there for $29.99 was made to sell for 20-60% more at a specialty or department store. The company operates 234 stores across Canada. Winners' market niche is similar to that of its American sister store T.J. Maxx.
Winners is the second album by American New York City based Kleeer.
Winners is the fifth studio album by The Brothers Johnson, released in 1981.
Winners is an album by American singer Bobby Darin, released in 1964.
Winners is a collection of award-winning short fiction by science fiction and fantasy author Poul Anderson, first published in paperback by Tor Books in August 1981. The pieces were originally published between 1960 and 1972 in the magazines The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Analog, and Galaxy Magazine.
The book contains five novellas and novelettes by the author, all of which won literary awards.
Winners is a half-hour motorsports television show hosted by NASCAR driver Neil Bonnett that aired for four seasons from April 7, 1991 to July 17, 1994. The show aired on TNN and each episode profiled a different championship racer. Following Bonnett's death on February 11, 1994, the show was renamed Neil Bonnett's Winners and continued for one additional season with guest hosts.
Usage examples of "winners".
Remember, though: the editors were required to print the winners, but made their choices among the runners-up since it was impossible to include every one of these.
For those three, like the seventeen other winners the Aliens are supposed to pick in the other testing areas around the world, it never was practically impossible.
However, many past winners have voluntarily made the trek and the Lottery Commission likes it that way.
Nine out of every twelve winners each year subsequently had declared bankruptcy.
Now the winners were on their own as far as structuring the payment of taxes went.
The Feds just hung the winners out there with a pat on the back and a big check.
And when the winners weren't astute enough to set up sophisticated accounting and financial systems, the tax boys would come after them and take every last dime they had, under the guise of penalties and interest and what-not, and leave them poorer than when they started out.
As he paged through year after year of lottery winners, the results were almost identical, the ratio staying at virtually nine out of twelve a year declaring personal bankruptcy.
The page represented the list of twelve consecutive lottery winners from exactly ten years ago.
Herman Rudy, Bobbie Jo Reynolds, LuAnn Tyler, the list went on and on, twelve winners in a row.
Donovan gave that person the names of the twelve consecutive lottery winners who had not declared bankruptcy.
Eleven of the lottery winners had duly filed their tax returns each year, his source had reported.
Of the twelve lottery winners, she had been by far the most memorable.
But he was fairly certain that she and perhaps some of the other winners were hiding something about the lottery.
Jackson focused briefly on one obvious question: Of all the lottery winners why had the man targeted LuAnn?