Crossword clues for years
years
- What tree rings represent
- What candles on a cake might indicate
- Twelve-month spans
- They're a part of every century
- Some sentence units
- Decade units
- Calendar cycles
- Annual periods
- A rather long time
- A measure of time
- 1984 and 2001 e.g
- 1492 and 1776 were notable ones
- Wine-bottle listings
- What many days turn into
- What it often takes to earn a degree
- What birthday cake candles represent
- Vintner's data
- Vintage units
- Time (seemingly) in between checks, for a freelancer
- Thirty ___ War
- They're always advancing
- They may be golden
- There are 10 in a decade
- The five in a lustrum
- Ten ___ After
- Some have 366 days
- Solar and lunar periods
- Sentence units?
- Sentence divisions
- Sentence components
- Senior and junior
- Presidential term's four
- Parts of dates
- Parts of a decade
- Numbers on wine labels
- Numbers on almanac covers
- Numbers following copyright symbols
- New Day divider
- New _____ Day
- New ____ Day
- Neptune's are about 165 times longer than ours
- Millennium's thousand
- Measures for Earth's travels
- Measurements of time
- Many, many months
- M, L and XL, e.g., but not S
- Life span units
- Leap and lunar
- Leap and fiscal
- Insurance policy measurements
- Hoover's "___ of Adventure."
- Figures on wine bottles
- Dog __
- Decade's 10
- Decade tenths
- Decade makeup
- Decade components
- Data for auto aficionados
- Dana's ''Two ___ Before the Mast''
- Class ring numbers
- Century units
- Century fractions
- Candles can represent them
- Calendar notations
- Astronomical and lunar
- Anniversaries mark them
- All these ___ ...
- Age measurement
- A century has 100 of them
- 365-day periods
- 25 B.C. and 1978, e.g
- 2017 and 2018, for example
- 1066 and 1776
- "Reelin' in the ___" (1973 Steely Dan song)
- ____ of Decision : Truman's memoirs
- Oh, so many moons
- Long time
- Graduating classes
- Calendar periods
- Sophomore and junior, e.g.
- Millennium makeup
- Vineyard data
- Freshman, sophomore, etc.
- Sentence units, often
- Orbital periods
- Quite a while
- A dog's age
- A long time
- 2001 and 2010
- College classes
- 1492, 1776, 2001, etc.
- Senior, junior and sophomore
- See 66-Across
- See 64-Across
- See 49-Across
- The time during which someone's life continues
- Late time of life
- A prolonged period of time
- Calendar units
- "The Best ___ of Our Lives"
- Ten make a decade
- Many, many moons
- "The ___ at the spring": Browning
- Measures of time
- Thurber's "The ___ with Ross"
- Time periods
- Newcomers in Januaries
- Oenologists' concerns
- Periods of time
- Century components
- Age measures
- "Two ___ Before the Mast": Dana
- Time units
- Birthday intervals
- Certain revolutions' durations
- "The days of our ___"
- Marianne Moore's "What Are ___?"
- Age components
- Ceremony's ending with organs going on for a long time
- Youth leader ’appily listens a long time
- Age of maturity finally acquired by organs
- Very long time
- Candle count
- Quite some time
- Time divisions
- Decade parts
- Time spans
- The time of one's life?
- Quite a spell
- Astronomical periods
- Candles on a cake, symbolically
- Rather long time
- Pretty long time
- What candles may represent
- What birthday candles represent
- Twelve-month periods
- Revolutionary periods?
- Many months
- Decade fractions
- Century segments
- Birthday units
- What some candles represent
- TRIPS AROUND THE SUN
- There are five in a lustrum
- Months and months and months
- Junior and Senior
- Decade divisions
- Calendar spans
- 365-day terms
- 12-month periods
Wiktionary
n. (plural of year English).
WordNet
n. a late time of life; "old age is not for sissies"; "he's showing his years"; "age hasn't slowed him down at all"; "a beard white with eld"; "on the brink of geezerhood" [syn: old age, age, eld, geezerhood]
a prolonged period of time; "we've known each other for ages"; "I haven't been there for years and years" [syn: long time, age]
the time during which someone's life continues; "the monarch's last days"; "in his final years" [syn: days]
Wikipedia
Years (by One Thousand Fingertips) is the second studio album by Canadian folk rock band Attack in Black, released on March 10, 2009 on Dine Alone Records. The album was released both on CD and on one thousand 12" vinyl records. Singles released from the album are "Beasts" (February 24, 2009) and "Liberties" (July 2009). The layout and photography present in both CD and vinyl versions were by Daniel Romano and Ian Kehoe.
Years is the debut solo album by Years, a solo project by Ohad Benchetrit of Do Make Say Think and Broken Social Scene.
Years was born from the wealth of music that Benchetrit had been gathering, but did not belong with his other projects. "I basically just wanted to use all of this material that I'd compiled on my hard drive," he says, "songs that got started and never finished, or that were parts of other projects and never really got off the ground. So I started trying to finish that [unfinished] record. But in the process, I kept replacing the older songs, one song at a time. About a year later, I'd replaced them all. Years was the album I was left with."
Years has been described as "the best parts of Bell Orchestre, I Am Robot And Proud and The Hylozoists, and combines them into a sweeping flurry of instruments" Years was recently named "record of the year" by Jude Rogers of The Guardian, and was described as "quite simply a triumph" by Paul Brown of Drowned in Sound.
"Years" is a song written by Kye Fleming and Dennis Morgan, and recorded by American country music artist Barbara Mandrell. It was released in December 1979 as the second single from the album Just for the Record. The song was Mandrell's third number one on the country chart. It stayed at number one for a single week and spent a total of ten weeks on the country chart.
Usage examples of "years".
Above two hundred and fifty years after the death of Trajan, the senate, in pouring out the customary acclamations on the accession of a new emperor, wished that he might surpass the felicity of Augustus, and the virtue of Trajan.
Under the mild administration of Titus, the Roman world enjoyed a transient felicity, and his beloved memory served to protect, above fifteen years, the vices of his brother Domitian.
Such was the fate of the son of Marcus, and so easy was it to destroy a hated tyrant, who, by the artificial powers of government, had oppressed, during thirteen years, so many millions of subjects, each of whom was equal to their master in personal strength and personal abilities.
A thousand years afterwards, Italy could boast, that of the fourscore most generous and celebrated wines, more than two thirds were produced from her soil.
During a happy period of more than fourscore years, the public administration was conducted by the virtue and abilities of Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, and the two Antonines.
After a war of about forty years, undertaken by the most stupid, maintained by the most dissolute, and terminated by the most timid of all the emperors, the far greater part of the island submitted to the Roman yoke.
But the tranquil life of Antoninus Pius was spent in the bosom of Italy, and, during the twenty-three years that he directed the public administration, the longest journeys of that amiable prince extended no farther than from his palace in Rome to the retirement of his Lanuvian villa.
Those nations had submitted to the Roman power, but they seldom desired or deserved the freedom of the city: and it was remarked, that more than two hundred and thirty years elapsed after the ruin of the Ptolemies, before an Egyptian was admitted into the senate of Rome.
It was six hundred feet in length, built entirely of white marble, capable of admitting the whole body of the people, and finished in four years, whilst Herod was president of the Athenian games.
The memory of this comedy, repeated several times during the life of Augustus, was preserved to the last ages of the empire, by the peculiar pomp with which the perpetual monarchs of Rome always solemnized the tenth years of their reign.
During a long period of two hundred and twenty years from the establishment of this artful system to the death of Commodus, the dangers inherent to a military government were, in a great measure, suspended.
Roman world forty-two years, with the same invariable spirit of wisdom and virtue.
He promoted several of her lovers to posts of honor and profit, and during a connection of thirty years, invariably gave her proofs of the most tender confidence, and of a respect which ended not with her life.
He lived but four years afterwards: but he lived long enough to repent a rash measure, which raised the impetuous youth above the restraint of reason and authority.
During the three first years of his reign, the forms, and even the spirit, of the old administration, were maintained by those faithful counsellors, to whom Marcus had recommended his son, and for whose wisdom and integrity Commodus still entertained a reluctant esteem.