- - Hard to engage in a job with some rigging, turning to address someone else
- - sort of speech perhaps too sloppy
- - Butchers notoriously miss this change of direction in address
- - Raised comma in text
- - apropos the sign of possession...
- - It's marked up in butcher's or baker's, for example
- - Character raised in 'Rosemary's Baby'
- - Character in 'All's Well That Ends Well' and 'A Midsummer Night's Dream'
- - Mark indicates some of the letters are missing
- - You can see me in John o' Groats, and in Land's End, but not in between!
- - Mark raised concerns finally in biblical text, a preacher almost bottling it?
- - Sign of possession
- - Higher pair of black squares in this grid, typographically
- - Mark of omission
- - Part of man's or woman's
- - Sign of omission
- - Rhetorical device in short stanza penned by American Gothic writer
- - sign for a missing letter
- - Item misplaced by greengrocers?
- - Punctuation mark denoting omission
- - American member Henry brought into line is addressing someone else
- - Character from Côte-d'Or?
- - Sign for the letter that's gone missing
- - Perhaps too bad a mark
- - Partly how one makes one's mark
- - Punctuation mark missing from ones grammar
- - Mark has a fresh hope — to restrict bad temper
- - Mark small extract from Eugene O'Neill
- - Single quote mark
- - Often misplaced punctuation mark
- - D'Arcy's character?
- - Mark smashed soap award, reportedly
- - Maker's mark?
- - One with job on line receiving hard address
- - "Schindler's List" character
- - Will-o'-the-wisp feature
- - Eugene O'Neill character?
- - Qur'an part
- - Contraction mark
- - Contraction punctuation
- - Cat-o'-nine-tails feature
- - Entr'acte part
- - Space-saving device
- - "OH CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN . . . "
- - "O death, where is thy sting?"
- - Rhetorical device
- - Jack-o'-lantern feature
- - Certain punctuation mark
- - Punctuation mark
- - Spare photo (anag.)
- - Punctuation mark used to indicate letter omission or to form possessives
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