Wordscapes Level 3320, Cliff 8 Answers
The Wordscapes level 3320 is a part of the set View and comes in position 8 of Cliff pack. Players who will solve it will recieve 37 brilliance additional points which help you imporve your rankings in leaderboard.
The tray contains 7 letters which are ‘POLEPPD’, with those letters, you can place 9 words in the crossword. and 5 words that aren’t in the puzzle worth the equivalent of 5 coin(s).This level has no extra word.
The tray contains 7 letters which are ‘POLEPPD’, with those letters, you can place 9 words in the crossword. and 5 words that aren’t in the puzzle worth the equivalent of 5 coin(s).This level has no extra word.
Wordscapes level 3320 Cliff 8 Answers :
Bonus Words:
- DOPE
- LOPPED
- PLOD
- POLED
- POPE
Regular Words:
- DOLE
- LODE
- LOPE
- LOPED
- PLED
- PLOP
- PLOPPED
- POLE
- POPPED
Definitions:
- Dole : grief; sorrow; lamentation. [Archaic] And she died. So that day there was dole in Astolat. Tennyson.nnSee Dolus.nn1. Distribution; dealing; apportionment. At her general dole, Each receives his ancient soul. Cleveland. 2. That which is dealt out; a part, share, or portion also, a scanty share or allowance. 3. Alms; charitable gratuity or portion. So sure the dole, so ready at their call, They stood prepared to see the manna fall. Dryden. Heaven has in store a precious dole. Keble. 4. A boundary; a landmark. Halliwell. 5. A void space left in tillage. [Prov. Eng.] Dole beer, beer bestowed as alms. [Obs.] — Dole bread, bread bestowed as alms. [Obs.] — Dole meadow, a meadow in which several persons have a common right or share.nnTo deal out in small portions; to distribute, as a dole; to deal out scantily or grudgingly. The supercilious condescension with which even his reputed friends doled out their praises to him. De Quincey.
- Lode : 1. A water course or way; a reach of water. Down that long, dark lode . . . he and his brother skated home in triumph. C. Kingsley. 2. (Mining) A metallic vein; any regular vein or course, whether metallic or not.
- Lope : of Leap. [Obs.] And, laughing, lope into a tree. Spenser.nn1. To leap; to dance. [Prov. Eng.] “He that lopes on the ropes.” Middleton. 2. To move with a lope, as a horse. [U.S.]nn1. A leap; a long step. [Prov. Eng.] 2. An easy gait, consisting of long running strides or leaps. [U.S.] The mustang goes rollicking ahead, with the eternal lope, . . . a mixture of two or three gaits, as easy as the motions of a crade. T. B. Thorpe.
- Pled : imp. & p. p. of Plead [Colloq.] Spenser.
- Plop : To fall, drop, or move in any way, with a sudden splash or slap, as on the surface of water. The body plopped up, turning on its side. Kipling.nnAct of plopping; the sound made in plopping.
- Pole : A native or inhabitant of Poland; a Polander.nn1. A long, slender piece of wood; a tall, slender piece of timber; the stem of a small tree whose branches have been removed; as, specifically: (a) A carriage pole, a wooden bar extending from the front axle of a carriage between the wheel horses, by which the carriage is guided and held back. (b) A flag pole, a pole on which a flag is supported. (c) A Maypole. See Maypole. (d) A barber’s pole, a pole painted in stripes, used as a sign by barbers and hairdressers. (e) A pole on which climbing beans, hops, or other vines, are trained. 2. A measuring stick; also, a measure of length equal to 5 Bacon. Pole bean (Bot.), any kind of bean which is customarily trained on poles, as the scarlet runner or the Lima bean. — Pole flounder (Zoöl.), a large deep-water flounder (Glyptocephalus cynoglossus), native of the northern coasts of Europe and America, and much esteemed as a food fish; — called also craig flounder, and pole fluke. — Pole lathe, a simple form of lathe, or a substitute for a lathe, in which the work is turned by means of a cord passing around it, one end being fastened to the treadle, and the other to an elastic pole above. — Pole mast (Naut.), a mast formed from a single piece or from a single tree. — Pole of a lens (Opt.), the point where the principal axis meets the surface. — Pole plate (Arch.), a horizontal timber resting on the tiebeams of a roof and receiving the ends of the rafters. It differs from the plate in not resting on the wall.nn1. To furnish with poles for support; as, to pole beans or hops. 2. To convey on poles; as, to pole hay into a barn. 3. To impel by a pole or poles, as a boat. 4. To stir, as molten glass, with a pole.nn1. Either extremity of an axis of a sphere; especially, one of the extremities of the earth’s axis; as, the north pole. 2. (Spherics) A point upon the surface of a sphere equally distant from every part of the circumference of a great circle; or the point in which a diameter of the sphere perpendicular to the plane of such circle meets the surface. Such a point is called the pole of that circle; as, the pole of the horizon; the pole of the ecliptic; the pole of a given meridian. 3. (Physics) One of the opposite or contrasted parts or directions in which a polar force is manifested; a point of maximum intensity of a force which has two such points, or which has polarity; as, the poles of a magnet; the north pole of a needle. 4. The firmament; the sky. [Poetic] Shoots against the dusky pole. Milton. 5. (Geom.) See Polarity, and Polar, n. Magnetic pole. See under Magnetic. — Poles of the earth, or Terrestrial poles (Geog.), the two opposite points on the earth’s surface through which its axis passes. — Poles of the heavens, or Celestial poles, the two opposite points in the celestial sphere which coincide with the earth’s axis produced, and about which the heavens appear to revolve.