NYT Crossword June 4 2016 answers
We are sharing here all answers for NYT June 4 2016 crossword. Scroll down and find them below. All answers together In one page! Enjoy!
The New York Times (NYT) Crossword is the new wonderful word game developed by New York Times, known by his best puzzle word games on the android and apple store.
The main idea behind the New York Times Crossword Puzzles is to make them harder and harder each passing day- world’s best crossword builders and editors collaborate to make this possible.
Monday’s crossword is always the easiest of them all and then they get more and more sophisticated as the week goes by. The most difficult puzzle is published on Sunday.
Access to hundreds of puzzles, right on your Android device, so play or review your crosswords when you want, wherever you want!
Keep your mind sharp with word games from The New York Times. Free to download, the app offers puzzles for every level so you can steadily improve your skills every day.
We post crossword answers daily, so please bookmark us and visit our website often.
June 4 2016 crossword
When "Double, double toil and trouble" is chanted in "Macbeth":
Largest employer in the Midwest's Quad Cities, for short:
Lily Tomlin character with a headset:
Birds whose eggs are incubated by males:
Hollywood star whose grandfather was the Cuban patriot José Martí:
Home of the city and county of Waterford: Abbr.:
1980s electronic innovation from Detroit:
Seal of office for some pharaohs:
Opera genre for "Tosca" and "Pagliacci":
Cartoon crony of Fancy-Fancy and Choo-Choo:
Awards that have had a Healthcare category since 2009:
Hooked projection on a bird feather:
New York city near the Pennsylvania border:
___ Season Tip-Off (annual hoops event):
Area with lawns and picket fences, informally:
Like seven of the 12 presidents between 1869 and 1923:
Super Bowl whose pregame show honored the Apollo astronauts:
Conditional construct in computer programming:
Clark Gable film that was a remake of his "Red Dust":
Series often seen with S's on the ends:
Personal info such as education and work history:
Some drivers with "slow-moving vehicle" reflectors:
Like Homer Simpson or Herman Munster:
N.L. West team, on scoreboards:
Start of many California place names:
Go back to level list