Crossword Clue: Japanese verse
If you're looking for all of the crossword answers for the clue "Japanese verse" then you're in the right place. We found 2 answers for this crossword clue.
If you are stuck trying to answer the crossword clue "Japanese verse", and really can't figure it out, then take a look at the answers below to see if they fit the puzzle you're working on.
Matching Crossword Puzzle Answers for "Japanese verse"
Below is the complete list of answers we found in our database for Japanese verse:
Possibly related crossword clues for "Japanese verse"
Based on the answers listed above, we also found some clues that are possibly similar or related to Japanese verse:
- 17-syllable creation
- 17-syllable form of poetry
- 17-syllable Japanese poem
- 17-syllable Japanese verse form
- 17-syllable poem
- 17-syllable verse form
- 17-syllable verse
- 17-syllable work
- 3-line poem
- 5-7-5 verse
- "An old silent pond / A frog jumps into the pond / Splash! Silence again," e.g.
- Basho composition
- Basho work
- Basho's forte
- A poem like this clue / Although perhaps not quite as / Abominable
- A poem like this / Of 17 syllables / Split 5-7-5
- A poetry form/With seventeen syllables/And only three lines
- Bit of terse verse
- Eastern verse
- Its middle line is heptasyllabic
- Epigrammatic verse
- Japanese 17-syllable poem
- Japanese lines
- Japanese poem of seventeen syllables
- Japanese poem with 17 syllables
- Japanese poem
- Japanese poetry
- Japanese terse verse
- Japanese three-line poem
- Japanese three-line verse
- Japanese verse form
- Japanese verse
- Evocative three-line verse
- Exercise in brevity
- Form of Japanese poetry
- Form of poetry / Presented as in this clue / But not the others
- Oriental poem
- Seventeen-syllable creation
- Seventeen-syllable poem
- Seventeen-syllable poetry form
- Seventeen-syllable verse
- Verse often about nature
- Verse often inspired by nature
- Verse with 17 syllables
- The clue for this word, while not all that poetic, is an example
- Very short poem
- Traditional three-liner
- Stylised Japanese poem of 17 syllables
- Matsuo Basho work
- Poem like "The swallow flies up / Into a blue evening sky, / Summer's small herald"
- Poem name whose singular and plural forms are the same
- Poem of 17 syllables
- Poem patterned like / the one featured in this clue / [padding out the rest]
- Poem read in a Zen garden, perhaps
- Poem with 17 morae
- Poem with 17 syllables
- Poem with exactly 17 syllables
- Short Japanese poem
- Short Japanese verse
- Poetic form inspired by nature
- Poetic genre of Matsuo Basho
- Short poem about nature
- Short poem
- Short verse
- Narrowly defined poem
- Narrowly defined verse
- One may be written / Just like this clue is written / But a lot better
- One-stanza poem
- "The west wind whispered, / And touched the eyelids of spring: / Her eyes, Primroses," for a classic example
- Specifically designed poem
- Type of Japanese poem
- Type of poem
- Symmetrical Japanese poem
- Three-line Japanese poem
- Three-line Japanese verse
- Three-line opus
- Three-line poem
- Three-line verse
- Three-line work of art
- Three-line work
- Three-phrase poem
- Writing form even more constrained than a tweet
- Unrhymed poem
- Terse verse
- Senryu's cousin
Recent Usage of Japanese verse in Crossword Puzzles
We track a lot of different crossword puzzle providers to see where clues like "Japanese verse" have been used in the past.
Here are all of the places we know of that have used Japanese verse in their crossword puzzles recently:
- Penny Dell - Oct. 29, 2020
- Penny Dell - April 10, 2020
- Newsday - April 15, 2018
- Penny Dell - Aug. 13, 2017
- Sheffer - July 10, 2017
- Newsday - May 10, 2017
- LA Times - April 26, 2016
- Newsday - May 6, 2015
- Universal Crossword - June 18, 2014
- Merl Reagle Sunday Crossword - Dec. 29, 2013
- The Guardian Quick - Sept. 18, 2013
- Pat Sajak Code Letter - July 20, 2013
- Premier Sunday - May 5, 2013
- The Guardian Quick - Nov. 7, 2012
- USA Today - Sept. 26, 2011
- Newsday - Sept. 6, 2009
- Universal Crossword - July 11, 2005
- New York Times - July 3, 2002
- New York Times - July 24, 2001
- New York Times - May 29, 2000