Clues for the word "LEAR"
We've had 272 crossword clues used for this word, and seen it 705 times in crosswords. It was last seen in Mirror Daily crossword on March 20, 2025.
Definition of lear
- v. t. - To learn. See Lere, to learn.
- n. - Lore; lesson.
- a. - See Leer, a.
- n. - An annealing oven. See Leer, n.
Referring Clues
- Kind of jet
- Norman of sitcom fame
- Gloucester's king
- "Laughable Lyrics" writer
- Limerick maker
- Shakespearean king
- "There was an Old Man with a beard" writer
- Regan's father
- Cordelia's father
- "King ___" (play in which The Fool appears)
- King of tragedy
- "The Jumblies" poet
- The Earl of Kent is his courtier
- See 52-Down
- Albany's father-in-law
- Edward who popularized the limerick
- TV producer Norman
- "All in the Family" producer Norman
- Edward who wrote "The Owl and the Pussycat"
- Mad king of the stage
- "King ___" (play with the line "He's mad that trusts in the tameness of a wolf ...")
- Small jet maker
- Shakespearean character who calls himself "a very foolish fond old man"
- Shakespeare's "very foolish fond old man"
- Creator of "All in the Family"
- King of drama
- Father of Regan
- He wrote "There was an old man of Thermopylae / Who never did anything properly ..."
- "A Book of Nonsense" author, 1846
- King who was the father of Cordelia
- King of the stage
- "There was an old man ..." poet
- Duke of Cornwall's father-in-law, in Shakespeare
- Father of Goneril
- Norman who created "All in the Family"
- Edward who wrote humorous verse
- "Maude" producer Norman
- Big name in jets
- Goneril's father
- Big name in sitcoms or jets
- Father of Goneril, Regan, and Cordelia
- He was "every inch a king"
- Jet giant
- Raving king of drama
- Jet set jet
- "The Owl and the Pussy-Cat" penner Edward
- Shakespeare's "King ___"
- Sitcom producer Norman
- "The Owl and the Pussycat" poet
- Jet maker since 1962
- Jet type
- Jet-setter's jet
- Jet maker
- King in a Shakespeare tragedy
- "The Owl and the Pussycat" poet Edward
- Shakespearean monarch
- Maker of small jets
- Self-described "poor, infirm, weak, and despised old man" of literature
- King on a stage
- Father of Cordelia, Goneril, and Regan
- British king of literature
- Plum stage role for Plummer
- Father-in-law of the Duke of Albany and the Duke of Cornwall
- Play king whose first line is "Attend the lords of France and Burgundy, Gloucester"
- Drama king?
- Limerick popularizer
- Tragic king
- King of Shakespeare
- "That way madness lies" speaker
- 1953 Welles role
- Drama king
- Member of the jet set?
- Part of the jet set?
- "I am a very foolish fond old man" speaker
- British limerick writer
- "All in the Family" producer
- Cornwall's father-in-law
- Limerick master
- Cordelia's dad
- Regan's dad
- Personal-aircraft pioneer
- Big name in small planes
- "Sanford and Son" producer Norman
- "Sanford and Son" producer
- Sitcom producer
- Goneril's dad
- "The Jeffersons" producer Norman
- Shakespearean royal
- Shakespearean character
- "All in the Family" producer Norman
- "Maude" creator Norman
- Tragic king of literature
- Jet set jet, perhaps
- A king or a jet
- "The Owl and the Pussy-Cat" poet
- Type of jet
- Shakespearean royalty
- Olivier role
- "Good Times" producer
- King in a Shakespearean tragedy
- King of the theater
- Norman of TV fame
- English limerick poet
- "The Jeffersons" writer Norman
- A jet or a king
- Shakespeare%C2%92s "King ___"
- The Duke of Albany's father-in-law
- Norman who produced "All in the Family"
- Sitcom king Norman
- Father of Cordelia
- Shakespeares "King ___"
- "All in the Family" producer
- "The Jeffersons" producer Norman
- Literary king
- King with three daughters
- Writer who coined the term "runcible spoon"
- Shakespearian king
- Jet or King
- One of Shakespeare's kings
- King with the immortal line "Who is it that can tell me who I am?"
- Jet or set name
- Noted limerick creator
- Shakespearean king who partly inspired Kurosawa's "Ran"
- Business jet company founder
- Creator of the Bunkers
- Jet pioneer
- Limerick man
- Shakespeare's king
- Shakespearean father of three
- "O, let me not be mad" speaker
- Mad Shakespearean king
- Poet Edward
- Mad king of literature
- Mad king of theater
- Nonsense poet Edward
- Archie Bunker's creator
- Mad King of Shakespeare
- Mad monarch of Brit lit
- Cordelia's pop
- Big jet name
- Name in jets
- Private jet brand
- Private jet producer
- Private jet maker
- "Runcible spoon" coiner
- Whom Cordelia called "As mad as the vex'd sea"
- Cessna competitor
- Shakespeare's legendary king
- Private-jet maker
- King with a sad end
- "Come not between the dragon and his wrath" speaker
- "Laughable Lyrics" poet
- Bard's tragic king
- Ill-fated king
- Swiss jet magnate
- Cordella's father
- Limerick writer Edward
- "All in the Family" creator Norman
- ___ jet
- Tragic daughter-misjudger
- Jet name
- Big name in executive jets
- Nonsense writer
- King who raged to Edgar on the heath
- Edward known for limericks
- "King ___" (Shakespeare)
- Big name in private jets
- "I am a man more sinn'd against than sinning" speaker
- Maker of business jets
- Gonerils father
- He produced "Good Times"
- "O, that way madness lies" speaker
- Shakespearean protagonist
- Tragic figure since 1606
- Jet-set jet
- Aviation innovator in the Inventors Hall of Fame
- Business jet
- Disinheritor of Cordelia
- "King ___"
- Edward who wrote "A Book of Nonsense"
- Monarch of the Bard
- "King ___" (Shakespeare work)
- King noted for saying "How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is / To have a thankless child!"
- He says to Cordelia, "Thy truth, then, be thy dower"
- Norman who created the Bunkers
- Tragic monarch
- Shakespearean king with three daughters
- Big name in business jets
- The type of jet in my mansion's hangar
- William Piper contemporary
- First speaker of "Nothing can come of nothing" (1606)
- Be apprised (of)
- King of Shakespearean tragedy
- King who said "Nothing will come of nothing"
- Role for Gielgud
- Shakespear's king
- "The Owl And The Pussy-cat" author
- Shakespearean king left listener
- King Edward
- "Old King Cole" artist's covered
- Humorous writer, tragic figure abused by children
- Sovereign's appreciation of humorist
- See 12
- Poet Virgil's last letter to head
- "Ingratitude, thou marble-hearted fiend" speaker
- Bunker's creator
- See 24
- One writing nonsense disheartens composer
- "Maude" creator
- "Here I disclaim all my paternal care" speaker
- TV legend Norman
- "Sanford and Son" co-producer
- "A Book of Nonsense" poet
- "Oh, that way madness lies" speaker
- "More sinn'd against than sinning" protagonist of Shakespeare
- King Edward?
- Comic writer's tragedy
- See special instructions
- King appearing from the wings of a jet
- Writer of real nonsense
- British king, one on field
- Jet variety
- Earl made king
- Who said "How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child!"
- The French hard-hearted king?
- See 27
- "Know that we have divided in three our kingdom" speaker
- "No man will ever write a better tragedy than ___": Shaw
- Limerick creator Edward
- "A Book of Nonsense" author Edward
- "We have divided in three our kingdom" speaker
- Bill Piper contemporary
- Literary king or literary Edward
- Edward ___, writer of nonsense poetry
- The Bard's tragic king
- Mad king of tragedy
- Theatrical king
- He asks "Which of you shall we say doth love us most?"
- "... serpent's tooth ... thankless child" speaker
- Business jet name
- "Good Times" producer Norman
- Business jet pioneer
- Inventor who named a daughter Shanda
- Maybe a real king?
- Shakespearean king played by Glenda Jackson
- “How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is to have a thankless child” speaker
- A brand of luxury jet - or a king made mad?
- Father of Goneril and Regan
- Real new role?
- King played by Glenda Jackson
- Shakespeare character who says "How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is / To have a thankless child!"
- Shakespeare title king
- A real mess of the title role
- King quoted as saying "How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is / To have a thankless child!"
- King who was played by a woman on Broadway in 2019
- Shakespeare's mad king
- Norman who created Archie and Edith Bunker
- King who banished Cordelia
- Titular Shakespearean king
- King of English theater
- Whom Cordelia calls "As mad as the vex'd sea"
- Norman or English king?
- "A Book of Nonsense" author
- Shakespearean title king
- Prolific TV producer Norman
- King who said "How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child!"
- Edward ___, poet who wrote "The Owl and the Pussy-cat"
- King who says to Cordelia, "Nothing can come of nothing"
- Part of a billionaire's jet set?
- Shakespearean ruler who divides his kingdom between two of his daughters
- "Oh, that way madness lies" king
- Shakespearean counterpart to Logan on "Succession"
Last Seen In
- Mirror Daily - March 20, 2025
- King Syndicate - Thomas Joseph - March 20, 2025
- Mirror Daily - March 13, 2025
- Mirror Daily - March 02, 2025
- Mirror Daily - February 28, 2025
- King Syndicate - Thomas Joseph - February 27, 2025
- Mirror Daily - February 20, 2025
- Daily American - February 15, 2025
- Mirror Daily - January 22, 2025
- LA Times - January 21, 2025
- Mirror Daily - January 20, 2025
- New York Times - January 17, 2025
- Daily American - December 28, 2024
- King Syndicate - Eugene Sheffer - November 12, 2024
- King Syndicate - Eugene Sheffer - November 09, 2024
- Mirror Daily - November 03, 2024
- King Syndicate - Eugene Sheffer - October 28, 2024
- Family Time - October 28, 2024
- Daily American - October 24, 2024
- King Syndicate - Thomas Joseph - October 16, 2024
- King Syndicate - Thomas Joseph - October 05, 2024
- LA Times - September 23, 2024
- Evening Standard Cryptic - September 12, 2024
- LA Times - September 01, 2024
- King Syndicate - Eugene Sheffer - August 27, 2024
- Daily American - August 27, 2024
- LA Times - August 25, 2024
- USA Today - August 13, 2024
- Mirror Daily - August 02, 2024
- Mirror Daily - July 24, 2024
- And in 675 more crossword puzzles...