Clues for the word "OPE"
We've had 167 crossword clues used for this word, and seen it 428 times in crosswords. It was last seen in Daily American crossword on November 12, 2025.
Definition of ope
- a. - Open.
- v. t. & i. - To open.
Referring Clues
- "O Henry, ___ thine eyes!": Shak.
- Unlock, in poetry
- Unveil, in verse
- 48-Down, in poetry
- Expose, poetically
- Unlock, in verse
- Unlock, poetically
- Unseal
- Ajar, to a poet
- "Set ___ the doors, O Soul!": Whitman
- Expose, in verse
- Reveal, in poetry
- "The very minute bids thee ___ thine ear": Shak.
- What blossoms do, in poetry
- Unbolt, poetically
- Not shut, to Shelley
- High expectation for Eliza?
- Unlatch, to bards
- Reveal, poetically
- Expose, to poets
- Unbar, to Byron
- Unstop, poetically
- "And when I ___ my lips ...": Shak.
- Unlock, to a poet
- "O the cannons ___ their rosy-flashing muzzles!": Whitman
- Revealed, in verse
- Unveil, in poetry
- "Morn did ___ / Its pale eyes then ...": Shelley
- What flowers do, in poetry
- Reveal, in verse
- Unclose, poetically
- Unlock, to bards
- Unwrap, in verse
- Unlock, to a bard
- Expos'd
- "Behold, the heavens do ___": Shak.
- Unclose, in verse
- Unfold, in poetry
- 21-Across, to poets
- Uncork, to the Bard
- Unlock, in poesy
- Unlock, to Byron
- "To ___ their golden eyes" ("Cymbeline")
- Ajar, to the bard
- Unseal, to Blake
- Unlock, to Keats
- Unveil, to an odist
- "'I ___ you liked your drink,' sez Gunga Din"
- Uncover, poetically
- Unclose, in poetry
- Unlatch, in poems
- Not shut, in verse
- Cockney aspiration?
- Ajar, in poems
- "To his good friends thus wide I'll ___ my arms": Laertes
- "'I ___ you liked your drink,' sez Gunga Din"
- Cockney anticipation?
- Unveil, in poems
- Uncover, in verse
- "Earth still holds ___ her gate": Thomas Nashe
- Unveil, poetically
- Unfold, in verse
- Shakespearean verb
- "Wilt thou not ___ thy heart . . .?": Emerson
- Unseal, poetically
- "To ___ their golden eyes" (Shakespeare)
- "O Henry, ___ thine eyes!" (Shakespeare)
- Ajar, to Keats
- Not shut, poetically
- Poetically ajar
- Unveiled, in verse
- Reveal, to a bard
- Unlock'd
- Lay bare, to the Bard
- Unbar, to the Bard
- Unbarred, to a bard
- "Morn did ___ / Its pale eyes then
": Shelley
- And when I ___ my lips
: Shak.
- "O Henry, ___ thine eyes!" (Shakespeare)
- "To ___ their golden eyes" (Shakespeare)
- "Earth still holds ___ her gate": Thomas Nashe
- "Wilt thou not ___ thy heart ...?": Emerson
- Reveal, in poems
- Open, poetically
- Poets' open
- Uncork, in verse
- Uncork, to Falstaff
- Not shut, in odes
- "Ere Heaven shall ___ her portals ...": Byron
- Agape, in poems
- Uncork, to Keats
- Unclose
- Unclose, to poets
- Unlatch, poetically
- Not closed, in poetry
- Not shut, in poetry
- Unbar, to a bard
- Unfold, to a poet
- "... thus wide I'll ___ my arms": "Hamlet"
- Poetic open
- Open, to Shelley or Keats
- Mayberry kid, familiarly
- Unseal, to Shakespeare
- "Which, like dumb mouths, do ___ their ruby lips" ("Julius Caesar")
- Unfurl, to a poet
- Unseal, to a poet
- Not closed, in verse
- Ajar, poetically
- Open, to Pope
- Unclose, to Byron
- "...heaven shall ___ her portals": Byron
- "Why should I ___ thy melancholy eyes?": Keats, "Hyperion"
- "To his good friends thus wide I'll ___ my arms": "Hamlet"
- Open, to Christopher Marlowe
- "Yet that thy brazen gates of heaven may ___": Shak.
- Reveal in a poem?
- Unseal, in Shakespeare
- Cockney's wish?
- Expose in verse?
- Open, to Ovid
- Open, to Emerson
- Unfold, poetically
- Open, to poet Pope
- Poet's ajar
- Begin, in poetry
- Ajar, in poetry
- Unlatched, in verse
- Ajar, to a bard
- Ajar, to bards
- Not closed, poetically
- Unfasten, in verse
- Unlock, to poets
- Dream, with a Cockney accent
- Unlatch, in verse
- Unfasten, to a poet
- Unlatch, in an ode
- Unclose, to a poet
- Agape, poetically
- Andy's young un, casually
- Unseal, in poetry
- Lay bare, to a poet
- Go from bud to blossom, to a poet
- Unshut, poetically
- Agape, to a bard
- Unlock, in poems
- Ajar, in verse
- Unlock, to Shakespeare
- Unveil, to a bard
- Unlock, in a sonnet
- -
- Unclose, in poems
- Unfasten, poetically
- Break into, quaintly
- Ajar, to Pope
- Begin, poetically
- Bard's "unseal"
- “Adam, now ___ thine eyes”: “Paradise Lost”
- Agape, to bards
- Reveal, to a poet
- Bard's ajar
- Begin, in verse
- "'And when I ___ my lips let no dog bark!'": "The Merchant of Venice"
- Midwestern word often said before "'Scuse me!"
- Surprised Midwestern interjection
- Midwesterner's embarrassed interjection
- Midwestern "Ah, didn't see you there!"
- Be down in the dumps
Last Seen In
- Daily American - November 12, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - October 28, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - October 27, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - October 22, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - October 02, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - September 22, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - September 20, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - September 17, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - August 24, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - August 12, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - August 06, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - August 02, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - June 25, 2025
- New York Times - June 08, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - May 25, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - May 18, 2025
- New York Times - May 08, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - May 02, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - April 27, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - April 24, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - April 23, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - April 10, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - April 07, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - April 06, 2025
- King Syndicate - Eugene Sheffer - April 04, 2025
- Daily American - April 03, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - March 09, 2025
- USA Today - February 28, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - February 06, 2025
- Penny Dell Daily - January 30, 2025
- And in 398 more crossword puzzles...