➠ Words that start with i
List contains 13295 Words that start with "i".
- - Metrical foot consisting of two syllables
- - Bits of Shakespeare sonnets, or their subtext?
- - Feet and inches are measurements British insist on using first of all
- - Confession of giant lacking good feet
- - Metrical units with an unstressed and a stressed syllable
- - Metrical units with alternating long and short syllables
- - Fancy way of saying 'feet'?
- - Some metrical feet
- - Feature of William? Big feet!
- - Giant's description of himself, briefly: more than one foot?
- - Poetic metrical units
- - Poetic metrical units (Var.)
- - Poetic metrical feet
- - Opposites of trochees
- - Metrical feet: Lat.
- - Feet of two syllables.
- - Metrical feet
- - Metrical units
- - Metrical foot
- - Feet — setter's two to start with
- - Setter's perhaps half-straight feet?
- - Metric feet [Plural]
- - "She walks in beauty, like the night" feet
- - Iowa doctor starting to introduce poetic measures
- - "short-long" poetic feet
- - A doctor probing eyes, we hear, and feet
- - One cartoon character missing head and feet
- - Poetic pairs
- - 'Whose woods these are I think I know' has four
- - William bicycles -- feet getting stuck
- - 'But, soft! What light through yonder window breaks?,' e.g
- - There are usually five in a sonnet line
- - Metric poetic feet
- - Stressed feet, in poetry
- - Common sonnet line quintet
- - Literary feet
- - Verse units
- - Feet in some meters (Var.)
- - Feet in a line
- - Short feet
- - I am near big feet
- - Units in a poem
- - Pentameter pieces, perhaps
- - Horace's Epodes
- - Metric feet: L.
- - Film theatre
- - Poetic feet
- - Shakespeare's feet
- - Feet in some meters
- - Poets' feet
- - Sonnet line fivesome
- - Metric feet
- - Poet's feet
- - Some feet
- - "Frost-y" feet
- - Poetic measures
- - there are five in "shall i compare thee to a summer's day?"
- - Metrical foot: Fr.
- - Greek goddess of humour and poetry
- - Interested in trying a little poetry?
- - Device that takes pictures of poetic metric units?
- - It's one foot long
- - Metrical foot of a short then long syllable
- - Two-syllable poetic foot (anagram of "bima")
- - One foot in "the grave," poetically speaking
- - Shakespearean foot
- - "duh-dum" foot
- - Metrical foot consisting of an unstressed and a stressed syllable
- - Foot injury initially seen by a GP, perhaps
- - A two-syllable foot in poetry
- - longfellow's foot
- - Foot, in verse
- - Poetic foot with a short and long syllable
- - On island, young animal hasn't left foot
- - Metrical foot for the word "afoot"
- - poetic foot that goes "da-dum"
- - Amanda Gorman's foot
- - A metrical foot, in poetry
- - Foot, intact to start with, seen by a doctor
- - Lot of information on computer about a foot
- - Foot with two parts
- - Prosodic foot
- - Sonnet measure
- - Two-syllable poetic foot, often found in pentameter
- - The Bard's foot
- - Short-long foot in verse.
- - Short-long foot
- - One foot
- - Metrical foot of two syllables.
- - Bard's foot
- - A foot in a line
- - Verse foot
- - Foot
- - Poetic foot with a short and a long syllable
- - Metrical foot
- - Foot in a sonnet
- - Poetic foot
- - Anglicized term for a metrical foot of two syllables
- - Foot in a poem
- - Poet's foot
- - Foot on a page
- - Two-syllable foot
- - Maya Angelou's foot
- - Foot for Frost
- - Shakespeare's foot
- - Foot that's part of a meter
- - Foot in a line of poetry
- - Foot of a poet
- - Foot at first intact needs a doctor
- - Metric foot
- - Two-syllable poetic foot
- - One of 70 in a Shakespearean sonnet
- - Metrical short-long foot
- - Pound foot?
- - Foot type
- - Foot in a meter
- - Foot with first sign of infection attended by a doctor
- - Metrical foot, in poetry
- - Poet's metrical foot
- - Short-long metrical foot
- - Foot, to a poet
- - Kind of poetic foot
- - Foot that's in a meter?
- - Foot used to keep rhythm?
- - Byron's foot?
- - Literary foot
- - Poetry foot
- - One foot in a line
- - One foot, to a poet
- - Foot of verse
- - Ogden Nash's foot?
- - Frost's foot
- - Sonnet part
- - Foot in a line
- - Certain foot
- - Shelley's foot
- - Donne's foot
- - Small foot
- - Rhythmic foot
- - Not-so-big foot?
- - Sonnet unit
- - British capital raised, taking lead from Michael Foot
- - Foot in poetry
- - Foot bill initially after confirmation from setter
- - A metrical foot used in various types of poetry
- - Sonnet foot
- - "this clue," e.g.
- - "Platoon," but not "Dunkirk"
- - bit of blank verse
- - "Macbeth," but not "Hamlet"
- - Part of a meter, in literature
- - Bit of poetry penned by William Blake
- - Unit of rhythm in poetry
- - two-beat measure in poetry
- - da-dum, in poetry
- - Poetic part
- - da-DUM
- - Sonneteer's unit
- - Poetic meter
- - Pentameter component, often
- - Part of a pentameter?
- - Beat in poetry
- - Anapest's relative
- - Anapest's cousin
- - "Ballade" consists of one
- - Shakespearean fool
- - Verse unit.
- - Part of a poem's meter
- - Hamlet's "to be," e.g
- - Word that's ironically a trochee
- - "To be," to poets
- - One of two in 'The Grapes of Wrath'
- - Metrical unit, in odes
- - Shakespeare's 'to be,' e.g
- - Metric unit
- - A measure of William Blake's work?
- - It's scanned in poetry
- - Part of da-DUM, da-DUM, da-DUM
- - Part of poetic line -- the writer is British
- - Metrical unit
- - One-fifth of 'Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May'
- - "But, soft!", for instance
- - One-fifth of 'If music be the food of love, play on'
- - One of three in "To be or not to be"
- - Trochee's counterpart
- - Poetic unit of rhythm
- - Poetic unit
- - da-DAH
- - Poetic measure
- - 'Hurray' or 'alas'
- - Bit of poetic rhythm
- - One of Shakespeare's feet
- - A metrical unit
- - One of four in "As I Was Going to St. Ives"
- - Hamlet's "To be," for one
- - Part of a meter
- - "Behold" or "arise" in poetry
- - "To be," e.g.
- - Vermont but not New Hampshire, e.g.?
- - One-quarter of "Whose woods these are I think I know"
- - One fifth of "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?"
- - Songwriter's poetic meter
- - Poetic meter unit
- - Rubaiyat bit
- - Petrarchan unit
- - Anapest relative
- - Two-syllable poetic unit
- - I am writer of such verse?
- - setter admits to being writer of poetic form
- - Of short-long metric feet
- - Of a metrical foot
- - Like some Shakespearean verse
- - Kind of metric foot in poetry
- - Following unlimited mounting pain, doctor in charge of feet
- - Of a metrical foot of two syllables, one short and one long
- - Billy loses the head with a fair amount of Arabic verse - it's the stress!
- - Like much of Keats's poetry
- - Like feet of no concern to a podiatrist?
- - Written in verse, in a way
- - Kind of pentameter
- - Like much of Wordsworth's poetry
- - ...... pentameter (kind of verse)
- - Of a poetic foot
- - Certain satirical verse
- - Verse meter.
- - Type of verse
- - Kind of verse
- - Written in verse
- - ____ pentameter, verse form
- - ........ pentameter, form of verse in much of shakespeare's work
- - Atrica could go either way about using feet
- - In poetry, having a stressed syllable after an unstressed one
- - Shakespeare's metre; ... pentameter
- - --- pentameter, poetic metre employed by Shakespeare
- - Like much old poetry
- - Like long measures
- - Like "To be or not to be"
- - ...... pentameter (poetic meter used by Shakespeare)
- - Using short-long metrical feet
- - This writer is second-class -- current chapter's concerned with feet!
- - Like a sonnet, in a way
- - Written in poetic feet
- - One is writer with odd feet
- - It's impracticable to drop plectra, as it'll create stress for Yeats
- - Like most sonnets
- - Miami Beach is missing ? ahem! A stress for Yeats?
- - Like the meter in sonnets
- - Stressed at the end, in a way
- - ...... pentameter
- - Like Shakespeare's feet
- - Like a Shakespearean "Ta-da!"
- - Like Shakespeare's sonnets
- - Like much Shakespearean dialogue
- - Certain poem
- - Satirical poem.
- - it describes a foot in metres
- - Setter is writer, stressed in a particular way
- - Gilbert & Sullivan's "Princess Ida" is written in it
- - The writer is using pens to write verse?
- - Verse using short-long metrical feet
- - Poetic beats
- - Satirical poems.
- - Parts of a meter
- - Poetic meters
- - Poetic feet
- - "perfume" and "cologne," poetically
- - feet for yeats
- - There are 70 in a Shakespearean sonnet
- - pope's feet?
- - "shall i compare thee to a summer's day?" quintet
- - Starts of most limericks
- - Shakespearean sonnet units
- - Shakespeare'sfeet
- - Keats feet
- - Feet with rhythm?
- - Feet in a sonnet
- - Sonnet line quintet
- - Trio in 'To be, or not to be'
- - Shakespeare's plays are full of them
- - Virtually any line from Shakespeare?
- - Title for Shakespeare
- - Song recounting a leisurely walk?
- - Name of the documentary sports drama based on the life of the nine-time Olympic gold winning athlete from 17a: 3 wds.
- - 1951 John Van Druten play
- - Play by John Van Druten adapted from Christopher Isherwood's novel 'Goodbye to Berlin'
- - Hit 1951 play that inspired 'Cabaret'
- - Old play featuring Sally Bowles
- - 1951 play on which "Cabaret" is based
- - Play that was the basis for "Cabaret"
- - 1951 play that inspired "Cabaret"
- - Play for which Julie Harris won the 1952 Tony for Best Actress
- - Play on which "Cabaret" is based
- - "Cabaret" basis
- - Play by Van Druten: 1951
- - Vehicle for 42 Down.
- - Winner of the Critics' Award.
- - Play by Van Druten cum Isherwood.
- - 1951 John Van Druten play that later inspired "Cabaret"
- - Earlier Julie Harris hit.
- - "Today ...... man" (bar mitzvah declaration)
- - "Today .... man": stereotypical bar mitzvah announcement
- - '-- human being!' ('The Elephant Man' quote)
- - "Today ...... man" (Bar Mitzvah statement): 3 wds.
- - Grammy-winning song "...... Man of Constant Sorrow"
- - "...... Simple Man" (#1 Ricky Van Shelton song)
- - "Yes, ...... fatal man . . . "
- - "...... man of destiny."
- - What "Ich bin ein" means
- - Simon & Garfunkel's ' Rock'
- - '-- Rock' (1966 hit)
- - "...... Rock" (Simon & Garfunkel hit)
- - Guided by Voices "...... Scientist"
- - "...... lineman for the county" (Glen Campbell lyric)
- - Popular Reddit section with Q&As
- - Meaning of "Ich bin ein" in J.F.K.'s quote
- - Simon's ".... Rock"
- - 1966 hit ".... Rock"
- - "...... Rock", final track on "Sounds of Silence"
- - "...... Strange Loop," 2007 Douglas Hofstadter book
- - ".... Rock" (Simon & Garfunkel song)
- - "...... Rock" (Simon and Garfunkel song)
- - "...... Camera": Isherwood
- - "...... Dancer" (1973 Nureyev documentary)
- - "...... Camera" (Isherwood play)
- - "...... lineman for the county ..."
- - ".... lineman for the county": Campbell song lyric
- - ".... Rock" (Paul Simon song)
- - ".... Fugitive From a Chain Gang"
- - "...... Rock": Simon & Garfunkel
- - '-- Camera' (1955 film)
- - "...... Dancer" (Nureyev documentary)
- - Words before camera or rock
- - ".... Rock" ('66 song)
- - "...... Rock" (Simon and Garfunkel)
- - "...... Camera" (John Van Druten)
- - "...... Rock" (1966 Simon and Garfunkel hit)
- - "...... Camera" (1955 movie)
- - Dylan's "...... Lonesome Hobo"
- - "...... Rock": Simon and Garfunkel hit
- - Simon and Garfunkel's ".... Rock"
- - Simon and Garfunkel song "........ Rock"
- - ........ Lonesome Hobo : Bob Dylan
- - ".......... Rock" (pop tune)
- - "...... Union Woman" (old labor song)
- - John van Druten play, with 52 Across
- - Isherwood title starter
- - John van Druten play with 55 Across
- - Van Druten's "...... Camera"
- - "...... Camera": Van Druren
- - "...... Dancer," Nureyev film
- - "...... Camera": Van Druten
- - "...... Liberal": M. Arnold
- - "Oh, ...... cook . . . "
- - "...... Roman citizen": Cicero
- - "...... Liberal": Matthew Arnold
- - "...... stranger here myself."
- - ... camera
- - Rock.
- - Start of a quote by E.V. Lucas
- - O. W. Burt's "...... American"
- - "...... American," poem by Elias Lieberman
- - '67 Warhol movie with Nico
- - '67 Warhol movie starring Nico
- - '67 Warhol movie Nico was in
- - 2007 satirical best seller
- - Stephen Colbert bestseller subtitled "(And So Can You!)"
- - Colbert best-selling spoof of 2007
- - 2007 Stephen Colbert satirical book
- - 2007 Stephen Colbert bestseller subtitled "(And So Can You!)"
- - 2007 satirical bestseller by writers for Comedy Central
- - 2007 satirical best seller subtitled "And So Can You!"
- - Final track on Simon & Garfunkel's Sounds of Silence album (4 wds.)
- - final track on the album "sounds of silence"
- - Simon and Garfunkel song
- - Simon & Garfunkel hit, and hint to the starts of 17-, 24-, 48- ... and 35-Across, too!
- - Simon & Garfunkel song about emotional detachment
- - Final cut on the 'Sounds of Silence' album
- - Simon & Garfunkel song
- - Song that starts "A winter's day in a deep and dark December"
- - 1966 hit for Simon & Garfunkel
- - 1966 hit from the album "Sounds of Silence"
- - 1966 Simon & Garfunkel hit
- - Simon and Garfunkel tune
- - 1966 Simon and Garfunkel hit
- - Top 10 song of 1966
- - '60s hit that ends "an island never cries"
- - 2014 film about boxer Muhammad
- - 2014 boxing biopic
- - 2014 boxing documentary
- - Groaning shoe clerk's apologetic remark
- - Statement from the proud snake as its eggs were hatching?
- - "You didn't have to tell me that"
- - Start of a quotation by Mario Cuomo
- - Guided by Voices song from "Mag Earwhig!"
- - '-- a loss for words'
- - "...... your disposal"
- - '...... my wit's end!'
- - "...... your service"
- - "...... citizen": Cicero