Clues for the word "DDT"
We've had 153 crossword clues used for this word, and seen it 534 times in crosswords. It was last seen in New York Times crossword on January 29, 2025.
Referring Clues
- Banned pesticide
- C14H9Cl5, familiarly
- C14H9Cl5
- Bug killer, briefly
- "Silent Spring" topic
- Insect killer
- "Silent Spring" subject
- Danger in the water supply
- Old agricultural letters
- Banned insecticide
- Chloral derivative, for short
- One target of Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring"
- Banned bug spray
- Banned spray
- Toxic spray
- "Silent Spring" subj.
- "Silent Spring" killer
- Insecticide banned by the U.S. in 1973
- Banned bug killer
- Killer banned in 1973
- Banned substance
- Infamous insecticide
- Malathion alternative
- Banned mosquito control agent
- Banned bug bane
- Target of a 1972 ban
- 1970s EPA concern
- Banned agrochemical
- Chemical used to fight malaria
- Subj. of the book "Silent Spring"
- Pesticide banned by the EPA
- The WHO used it to fight malaria
- EPA-banned pesticide
- Malaria stopper
- Pesticide banned by the EPA in 1972
- Banned insecticide: Abbr.
- Banned insecticide, briefly
- Carson subject
- Banned insecticide, for short
- "Silent Spring" subject
- Prohibited bug spray
- Banned insecticide letters
- Outlawed insecticide
- Strong pesticide
- Banned insecticide (Abbr.)
- Insecticide letters
- Banned chemical
- Outlawed pesticide
- Eco hazard
- Insecticide banned since 1972
- Insecticide banned in 1972
- WWII spray
- Bug killer banned by the EPA
- The EPA banned it in 1972
- Bug-killing ecohazard, briefly
- Banned insect control agent
- Environmentally destructive pesticide
- WWII-era malaria controller
- Another banned chemical
- EPA-banned bug killer
- It's been banned in the U.S. since 1972
- Controversial pesticide (Abbr.)
- Insecticide banned by the EPA
- Taboo spray
- WWII insecticide
- Target of a 1972 ban in the U.S.
- Outlawed killer
- Notorious insecticide
- Outlawed spray
- Banned pesticide, abbr.
- Banned bug-killer
- Erstwhile pesticide
- Subj. of the 1948 Nobel in Physiology or Medicine
- Potent pesticide
- Old insecticide
- Pesticide letters
- Bug spray abbr.
- Insecticide abbr.
- Bug-spray letters
- Insecticide
- Bug killer
- Bug spray
- Insecticide, for short
- Bygone pesticide
- Banned insecticide's letters
- Insecticide whose spelled-out name has 31 letters
- Insecticide spelled-out name has 31 letters
- "Silent Spring" toxin
- Taboo spray's letters
- Its disappearance aided bald eagles
- Banned pesticide: Abbr.
- Banned organochloride
- E.P.A.-banned substance
- Toxic spray banned by the EPA
- Bane in Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi"
- Now-banned pesticide that decimated the bald eagle population
- Danger in the water supply, once
- Chemical restricted by the Stockholm Convention
- Malaria-fighting compound during W.W. II
- Prohibited insecticide
- Antimalarial agent
- Banned crop spray
- Outlawed pesticide, for short
- "Silent Spring" topic, for short
- "Silent Spring" pesticide
- Dangerous '50s crop spray
- "Silent Spring" topic, in brief
- Old crop spray
- Pesticide banned in 1972
- What the EPA banned in 1972
- E.P.A.-banned pesticide
- Prohibited pesticide
- Acronym for a banned insecticide
- "Silent Spring" spray
- Bug spray no more
- '50s crop spray
- Environmental no-no
- EPA concern of the 1970s
- Banished bug spray
- Pesticide banned in the '70s
- What Ms. Carson criticized
- Anti-malarial pesticide
- 8-bit video game console
- Early insecticide
- Outlawed organochlorine
- Carson's carcinogen
- Target of a 1972 EPA ban
- Toxic insecticide
- Pesticide banned in '72
- 1970s EPA target
- Illegal plant spray: Abbr.
- Banned organochlorine
- Debugging aid?
- Banned hydrocarbon
- EPA-banned pesticide since 1972
- Early EPA concern
- Toxin mentioned in Joni Mitchell’s “Big Yellow Taxi”
- Substance whose primary use earned its discoverer the 1948 Nobel Prize in Physiology - but is now banned
- "Silent Spring" subject, for short
- Insecticide whose 1972 ban led to the comeback of the bald eagle
- One of the Stockholm Convention's "dirty dozen" (2001)
- EPA-banned insecticide
- What Carson warned about
- What Rachel Carson wanted banned
- Erstwhile controller of Dutch elm disease
- Banned pesticide, for short
- Rachel Carson subject
- Noted organochloride, in brief
- Subj. of Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring"
- Banned compound once used to control malaria
- Banned antimalarial
- Substance banned for agricultural use in 1972, for short
- Rachel Carson subj.
Last Seen In
- New York Times - January 29, 2025
- New Zealand Herald - October 15, 2024
- New Zealand Herald - July 19, 2024
- Mindfood Daily - June 16, 2024
- Your Life Choices - May 29, 2024
- Mindfood Daily - January 29, 2024
- USA Today - January 11, 2024
- LA Times - November 25, 2023
- Your Life Choices - October 23, 2023
- Family Time - October 08, 2023
- New Zealand Herald - August 02, 2023
- New York Times - July 23, 2023
- Mindfood Daily - April 12, 2023
- New Zealand Herald - February 12, 2023
- King Syndicate - Eugene Sheffer - November 08, 2022
- Your Life Choices - October 20, 2022
- King Syndicate - Eugene Sheffer - October 14, 2022
- New York Times - October 06, 2022
- New York Times - August 14, 2022
- New York Times - July 08, 2022
- Mindfood Daily - July 01, 2022
- LA Times - June 11, 2022
- New York Times - January 29, 2022
- New York Times - November 06, 2021
- LA Times - February 05, 2018
- Wall Street Journal - January 02, 2018
- King Syndicate - Eugene Sheffer - December 06, 2017
- Chronicle of Higher Education - November 17, 2017
- Mirror Mini - November 13, 2017
- Penny Dell Sunday - November 05, 2017
- And in 504 more crossword puzzles...