Clues for the word "EEN"
We've had 321 crossword clues used for this word, and seen it 1108 times in crosswords. It was last seen in Daily American crossword on December 25, 2025.
Definition of een
- n. - The old plural of Eye.
Referring Clues
- Gloaming, to poets
- Velvet finish
- Poet's dusk
- P.M. hours, to a bard
- Poetic contraction
- Poetic time of day
- Poet's period after dusk
- Hallow ending
- Yet, poetically
- Early night, to a poet
- Fabric name suffix
- It follows sunset, in poetry
- Though, poetically
- Still, to poets
- When dark comes o'er the land
- Fabric name ending
- Dark time for poets
- Yet, in poems
- Poetic period
- Poetic adverb
- Poet's time of day
- Bard's early night
- Velvet finish?
- Fabric suffix
- Dusk, to Donne
- Poetic dusk
- Literary contraction
- Dark period of poetry
- Night of poetry
- Sundown, in sonnets
- Poet's contraction
- Bard's nightfall
- Still, in verse
- Twilight time to a poet
- Rhyme time?
- Poetic time
- Tho lead-in
- Sonneteer's sundown
- Lyrical period
- Twilight, to Tennyson
- ___ tho
- Dark time in poetry
- Bard's dark time
- Poetic time after dusk
- Poetic darkness
- With 9-Down, albeit, poetically
- "I should ___ die with pity": King Lear
- Opposite of morn, to a poet
- Suffix with velvet
- Close of day, to poets
- Dark time, in poetry
- Dark time, to a bard
- Poetic dark period
- Sundown, in poesy
- Ending for velvet
- Sundown, to Shelley
- Adverb in verse
- The bard's bedtime?
- Nighttime, in poetry
- Poet's sundown
- Yet, to Yeats
- Poetic night
- Ending with hallow
- Suffix with Hallow
- Nightfall of poetry
- It may precede "tho"
- Sunset time, in verse
- Twilight time, to a poet
- Day's end, poetically
- Darkening time in verse
- Tennyson's twilight
- Day's end, to a poet
- Contraction before "now"
- Dusk, poetically
- Keats's nightfall
- Sunset follower, in poetry
- Early night, in an ode
- Morn's opposite
- Bardic dusk
- Dark time, for short
- Dark'ning time
- Dusk, in verse
- "___ then would be some stooping": Browning
- Poetic sunset time
- Poet's dark time
- Poetic day's end
- Donne's dusk
- Night of yore
- "Faith, ___ with losing his wits": "Hamlet"
- Poetic nightfall
- Night time, to Burns
- Chaucer's twilight
- Poetic nighttime
- "My Ploughman he comes hame at ___": Burns
- Bard's dusk
- Quaint contraction
- Day's end, in verse
- Bard's twilight
- Bard's time
- Poet's nighttime
- Velvet ending
- Tennyson's dusk
- Nighttime's start, in poetry
- It adds 10 to 8?
- Velvet end?
- After dark, poetically
- Hallow conclusion?
- Bard's bedtime?
- Evening, in an ode
- Twilight time, to Tennyson
- Suffix with "velvet"
- Poe's evening
- Hallow ending?
- Attachment with velvet or Hallow
- Donne's dinnertime?
- Twilight, to a poet
- Late in the day, for poets
- Last letters appropriate for October's last day
- "Hallow" ending
- Nighttime, to a poet
- Velvet ender
- "___ now, while walking down the rural lane" (Longfellow)
- Nightfall, to poets
- Poet's evening
- Ending with "Hallow"
- Bard's contraction
- Night of poetry?
- After dusk, poetically
- Velvet attachment?
- "Cant" or "hallow" ending
- Dark time, in verse
- When night comes o'er the land
- Suffix with "Hallow" or "velvet"
- Poet's early night
- Twilight, poetically
- Browning's bedtime?
- Poetic period after dusk
- Poet's nightfall
- When Donne is done for the day?
- Suffix for "velvet"
- After-dusk time, to a poet
- Dusk, to 7-Down
- Suffix with "velvet"
- "Faith, ___ with losing his wits": "Hamlet"
- "___ then would be some stooping": Browning
- Moreover, to poets
- "My Ploughman he comes hame at ___": Burns
- "Is it ___ so? Then I defy you, stars!": Romeo
- Sundown, to a bard
- Hallow conclusion
- "I should ___ die with pity, / To see another thus": King Lear
- Poetic gloaming
- Poetic even
- Even, to Emerson
- "___ as the green-growing bud unfolds": Longfellow
- Dark time for bards
- Velvet add-on
- Suffix for velvet
- "No more, but ___ a woman": "Antony and Cleopatra"
- Poetical twilight
- Time of day, briefly
- Still, to Robert Browning
- Night, in verse
- "Horatio, thou art ___ as just a man ..."
- Nightfall, in poetry
- Time o' day
- Tho'
- Still, in poetry
- Nighttime, in verses
- Poetic P.M.
- Ending for velvet or Hallow
- Ending for Hallow
- Dark time for a poet
- Suffix for "Hallow"
- "___ like the passage of an angel's tear": Keats
- Period in a sonnet
- Gloaming, in verse
- Nightfall, in verse
- "Velvet" attachment
- Shakespearean contraction
- Contracted time period?
- Night, poetically
- Hallow-___ (Samhain, as once written)
- Even to Emerson et al
- Bard's time of day
- Poetic twilight
- Still, to Shakespeare
- Opposite of morn
- Night time, poetically
- Nightfall, to bards
- Hallow ender
- Yet, in verse
- Dusk, to a poet
- 'Hallow' ending
- Velvet or Hallow ender
- "Horatio, thou art ___ as just a man ...": Hamlet
- Nighttime, poetically
- Post-dusk, poetically
- Bard's adverb
- Poe's night
- Dark time in an ode
- Shakespearean adverb
- Nighttime, in old poems
- Suffix with "velvet" or "hallow"
- Shakespearean twilight
- Poetic, V-less contraction
- Velvet tail?
- Twilight, to a bard
- It's between morn and night
- "Velvet" or "hallow" ending
- Evening in an ode
- Yet, to the Bard
- "___then my soul with exultation dances": Keats
- "I should ___ die with pity" (King Lear)
- "___ the slight harebell raised its head": Scott
- When the day's done, to Donne
- Morn's counterpart
- "I should ___ die with pity, / To see another thus": Shak.
- Dusk, to poets
- Late-October suffix
- Even (poet.)
- Poet's twilight
- Early night, to a bard
- Evening, to Emerson
- It was a dark period for Poe
- Time after dusk, to poets
- Bard's evening
- Still, poetically
- Poetic twlight
- Night, to the Bard
- Yet, to a poet
- Poet's "yet"
- Evening of poetry
- Poet's "still"
- Gloaming, to a poet
- "Good-___, good fellow" (greeting from Romeo)
- Dusk, to the Bard
- Even to Emerson
- Bard's night
- Dusk, to Pope
- Bard's bedtime
- Gloaming, to a sonneteer
- Period after dark, in poetry
- Contraction missing a V
- Day's end, in poems
- Burns' nighttime
- Bardic time
- Nightfall, poetically
- Dusk, to a bard
- "Hallow" add-on
- Evening, in old poems
- Poetic "indeed"
- Poetic evening
- "Hallow" ender
- Yeats' yet
- Night, in old poetry
- At least 12 hours from morn
- Yet, to Hamlet
- "___ pity scarce can wish it less!": Byron
- Bedtime for a Bard?
- "Hallow" suffix
- Dark time, in poesy
- Careening center?
- Bedtime, poetically
- Twilight, in verse
- Still, to a bard
- PM hours, to a poet
- Hallow end?
- Hallow follower
- Keats' nightfall
- Hallow or velvet ending
- Nightfall, in an ode
- Ending for "hollow" on Oct. 31
- Old poet's dinnertime?
- Even disfigured!
- Even when Victor's left
- In the end, even shorter
- Eviction setting
- "I should ___ die with pity...": Lear
- Sunset, to a bard
- Cant ending?
- Scot's night
- Poet's p.m.
- Night, in Glasgow
- Morn plus 12 hours
- Literary twilight
- Night, in poesy
- Romantic night
- After dark, way old
- Attachment to "Hallow"
- Night, if you're 425
- Super-old night
- Night of old rhymes
- Glasgow night
- Day's end, in old poems
- Dark time, to bards
- Browning's night
- Hallow part?
- "Velvet" suffix
- Yet, in poetry
- Even less
- Still less than seventeen
- Nightfall, to Keats
- Cant finish?
- Even as the contractor said?
- Still, in poems
- The "nighttime" in "fifteenth"
- After-sunset time, in poems
- Still, in poetry of old
- Dark period for poets
- Figure out a way to get even
- Even obtainable from the enemy
- Twilight, in poems
- Even as the contractor said
- Poetry night?
- It's even poetic in its brevity
- Ending for "cant"
- The end of 17?
- Still, for a poet
- When day is done, to Donne
- Bard's word
Last Seen In
- Daily American - December 25, 2025
- Mirror Mini - December 04, 2025
- Mirror Daily - November 27, 2025
- Mirror Daily - November 22, 2025
- Mirror Daily - October 31, 2025
- Mirror Daily - October 17, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - October 02, 2025
- Evening Standard Cryptic - September 30, 2025
- Mirror Daily - September 29, 2025
- Mirror Daily - September 25, 2025
- Mirror Daily - September 18, 2025
- Daily American - September 07, 2025
- Penny Dell Sunday - September 07, 2025
- Mirror Daily - September 06, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - September 06, 2025
- Mirror Daily - September 03, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - August 20, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - August 17, 2025
- Mirror Daily - August 13, 2025
- Mirror Daily - July 29, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - July 16, 2025
- Evening Standard Cryptic - July 15, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - June 25, 2025
- Daily American - June 23, 2025
- Mirror Daily - June 04, 2025
- Daily American - May 17, 2025
- King Syndicate - Eugene Sheffer - April 25, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - April 22, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - April 21, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - March 30, 2025
- And in 1078 more crossword puzzles...