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 King Syndicate - Thomas Joseph 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
- King Syndicate - Thomas Joseph - March 20, 2025
- Mirror Daily - 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
- Family Time - October 28, 2024
- King Syndicate - Eugene Sheffer - 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...