Crossword Clue: Wordplay
If you're looking for all of the crossword answers for the clue "Wordplay" then you're in the right place. We found 3 answers for this crossword clue.
If you are stuck trying to answer the crossword clue "Wordplay", 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 "Wordplay"
Below is the complete list of answers we found in our database for Wordplay:
Possibly related crossword clues for "Wordplay"
Based on the answers listed above, we also found some clues that are possibly similar or related to Wordplay:
- "Americone Dream," e.g.
- Amuse with words
- "An everyday spud is a commentator," e.g.
- "A chicken crossing the road is poultry in motion," for example
- "A horse is a stable animal" is one
- Any of this puzzle's theme answers
- A pistol let off at the ear: Charles Lamb
- A play on words
- "A seven-day diet makes one weak," e.g.
- "Abel was I ere I saw Cain," e.g.
- According to Oscar Levant, it's "the lowest form of humor--when you don't think of it first"
- Bit of Cerf humor
- Bit of Grouchoesque wordplay
- Bit of humor
- Bit of Ogden Nash wordplay
- Bit of paronomasia
- Bit of Wilde wordplay
- Bit of wit
- Bit of word play
- Bit of wordplay from Groucho
- Bit of wordplay
- Bit or wordplay
- Alexander the Grape, e.g.
- Bad humor?
- Cause for a groan
- Cause of a smile, maybe
- Cause of some wincing
- "Frank and Ernest" or "Hi and Lois"
- Frank Zappa's "Sheik Yerbouti," e.g.
- Cerf specialty
- Certain bit of wit
- Groan cause, perhaps
- Groan cause
- Groan elicitor
- Groan inducer
- Groan-inducing play on words
- Groan man, e.g.
- Groan preceder, often
- Groan preceder
- Groan producer
- Groan-producing wordplay
- Groan provoker
- Groan trigger
- Groan-worthy play on words
- Groan-worthy remark, say
- Groaner
- Groaner?
- Groaner of a joke
- Groaner, often
- Groaner, sometimes
- Feature of many a Duchamp work
- Feature of many a graphic on "The Daily Show"
- Feature of many a Ludacris lyric
- Feature of many a New York Daily News headline
- Feature of many an Ogden Nash poem
- Groucho Marx specialty
- Groucho specialty
- Chairman Meow or Fidel Catstro, e.g.
- Homophone, maybe
- Full-groan wordplay
- Funny bit of wordplay
- "Horse voice," e.g.
- Device used by Shakespeare
- It may elicit groans
- "Cherry Garcia," e.g.
- "Cherry Garcia" is one
- It may involve a homophone
- It may not be intended
- It may not have been intended
- It seldom made Cerf bored
- Humorous ambiguity
- Humorous play on words
- Humorous wordplay
- "I bought a boat because it was for sail," e.g.
- ''I can't ride my bike. It's two tired,'' e.g.
- "I go fishing just for the halibut," e.g.
- "I threw away my golf shoes when I got a hole in one," e.g.
- "I threw away my golf shoes when I got a hole-in-one," e.g.
- "I used to be a banker, but I lost interest," e.g.
- "I used to be a banker but I lost interest," e.g.
- "I used to be a banker, but I lost interest," for example
- "I'd like to study philosophy, but I just Kant," e.g.
- Calembour
- Equivoke
- Equivoque
- Essence of a knock-knock joke
- Essence of many a punch line
- "Crepes of Wrath," e.g.
- "Canoe row a boat?" is one
- "Doing a crossword with a broken pencil is pointless," for example
- Crossword answer, at times
- Crossword clue that might end with a question mark
- "Dollars, taxes," e.g., for Dallas, Texas
- Cruciverbalist's specialty
- Crux of some riddles
- Jeu de mots
- ''Don't be fuelish,'' e.g.
- "Don't be fuelish," e.g.
- "Don't be fuelish," for one
- ''Don't be fuelish,'' for one
- "Cunning linguist," e.g.
- Joke with a homophone, say
- Dad joke standby
- Insignificant
- "Sticks float; they wood" is one
- "Kernel Sanders" is a corny one
- Many a Ben & Jerry's flavor
- Many a bon mot
- Many a "?" clue in a crossword
- Many a comic strip character's name
- Many a crossword clue
- Many a dad joke
- Many a Groucho Marx quip
- Many a Groucho quip
- Many a joke involves one
- Many a New York Post headline
- Many a punch line
- Many a puzzle clue ending in "?"
- Pullet Surprise, e.g.
- Many a Weird Al Yankovic title
- Many an "Airplane!" gag
- "Whirled peas" is one
- "Velcro . . . what a rip-off!", e.g.
- Punch line, perhaps
- The Beatles, e.g.
- Verbal groaner
- "Some nylons will give you a run for your money," e.g.
- "Plain fair," for one
- "Shaun of the Dead," e.g.
- The GOP Has a Koch Problem, e.g.
- Kind of verbal quibble.
- "The HarBowl," e.g.
- Play on words
- "Sherwood Florist," e.g.
- Something that may not be intended
- Virginia Woof or Fyodor Dogstoevsky, e.g.
- "Queen of denial", e.g.
- "Queen of denial," e.g.
- "Queen of denial" for Queen of the Nile
- The "Louisiana Perches," à la Walt Kelly.
- The lowest form of humor, according to some
- "The lowest form of humor," per Samuel Johnson
- "The lowest form of humor," supposedly
- "The lowest form of humorwhen you don't think of it first": Oscar Levant
- "The lowest form of wit," they say
- The lowest form of wit
- Sometimes it's funny
- "Treat homonyms as synonyms": Walter Redfern
- The O. Henry ___-Off
- Knock-knock joke basis
- Knock-knock joke, e.g.
- Knock-knock joke, essentially
- Knock-knock joke payoff
- Knock-knock joke punchline, usually
- Knock-knock joke, usually
- Knock-knock joke's punch line, usually
- "My bike won't go because it's two tired," e.g.
- ''My bike won't stand up. It's two tired,'' e.g.
- Often groan-inducing wordplay
- "My tailor is happy to make a pair of pants for me, or at least sew it seams," e.g.
- "The Santa Clause," for one
- Ogden Nash bit
- Ogden Nash specialty
- Paronomasia
- Paronomastic witticism
- Wit's end?
- Witticism
- Witty bit
- The title of this puzzle, e.g.
- "Running chickens are poultry in motion," for example
- Nash specialty
- "Poultry in motion," e.g.
- One may involve a homonym
- One may not be intended
- One of about 3,000 in Shakespeare's plays
- "New kid on the blog," e.g.
- One of "the highest form of literature," per Hitchcock
- Low form of wit, supposedly
- "Miró, Miró, on the wall," e.g.
- "Miró, Miró, on the wall," e.g.
- "No ___ intended"
- "Let us spray," e.g.
- "Noah kept bees in the ark hive," e.g.
- Mae West's "I used to be Snow White, but I drifted" is one
- "Maid in Japan," e.g.
- Lewis Carroll specialty
- "Phish Food," e.g.
- "Make Donald Drumpf Again" or "I'm Withered," e.g.
- "Piano is not my forte," e.g.
- ''Pick a cod, any cod,'' e.g.
- Piece of corn?
- Piece of wordplay
- "Sign language is pretty handy,"e.g.
- Word joke
- Word play
- Wordplay
- Wordplay bit
- Wordplay from Groucho
- Wordplay groaner
- Wordplay that often induces groans
- Wordplay that's said to be "the lowest form of humor"
- Wordsmith's offering
- Type of wordplay
- "Ugh, German sausage is the wurst," e.g.
- This puzzle's title, e.g.
- Schticky joke ender
- Slain rapper Big ___
- Slay on words?
- "Thyme on my hands," e.g.
- Unit of wordplay
- "Tea you later," for one
- What the French call "game of words"
- Smile producer
- Title like Bugs Bunny's "Hare Trigger"
- Title like "The Santa Clause" or "Knight and Day"
- "When the smog clears in California, UCLA," e.g.
- Yuckster's specialty
- So-called "lowest form of humor"
- So-called "lowest form of wit"
- Tom Swifty, e.g.
Recent Usage of Wordplay in Crossword Puzzles
We track a lot of different crossword puzzle providers to see where clues like "Wordplay" have been used in the past.
Here are all of the places we know of that have used Wordplay in their crossword puzzles recently:
- Penny Dell - April 26, 2019
- Penny Dell - April 5, 2019
- Canadiana Crossword - Dec. 17, 2018
- Penny Dell - Oct. 11, 2016
- Penny Dell - June 28, 2016
- Penny Dell - April 28, 2016
- USA Today Archive - Oct. 4, 1999
- USA Today Archive - Aug. 24, 1998
- New York Times - Oct. 27, 1987
- New York Times - June 7, 1973