The Daily Themed Crossword Mar 25 2022 Answers were just published after we played around with it and solved today’s puzzle in a timely matter. This puzzle special in the sense that everyday it allows you to play with a different theme hence the name Daily Themed Crossword. The clues that we were able to solve are grouped according to their orientation on the puzzle grid, so the down clues are included in the DOWN section and across ones on their respective section. We also tried to maintain the order in which they appear. This game is as fun as it’s difficult to solve so you’re invited to come back to our site and find the solutions every day that you struggle with solving it.
For another Daily Themed Crossword Answers go in the homepage.
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Across
- 1a. Sharp sign of hungerPANG
- 5a. Hit the slopes, saySKI
- 8a. Kid’s grocery store transport, perhapsCART
- 12a. Spanish for “love”AMOR
- 13a. Soup can metalTIN
- 14a. Bard of ___ (Shakespeare)AVON
- 15a. “Anna ___,” novel by Leo Tolstoy that was originally written in RussianKARENINA
- 17a. Take a breakREST
- 18a. Unadon fishEEL
- 19a. Cotton or nylon, to a BritFIBRE
- 21a. “The Three ___,” adventure novel by Alexandre Dumas that was originally written in FrenchMUSKETEERS
- 25a. Magnum ___ (artist’s best work)OPUS
- 26a. Overwhelming emotionAWE
- 27a. Actor Claflin from “Me Before You”SAM
- 30a. Sushi garnishROE
- 31a. Marlboro offering, informallyCIG
- 33a. Excellent performer, sayACE
- 34a. “The” follower to mean a conclusionEND
- 35a. “___ the door, please?”HOLD
- 37a. Cousin’s momAUNT
- 38a. “Les ___,” classic historical novel by Victor Hugo that was originally written in FrenchMISERABLES
- 40a. Abel’s biblical brotherCAIN
- 42a. Be under the weatherAIL
- 43a. Track, perhapsSONG
- 44a. Flies south, as a birdMIGRATES
- 49a. “Hell ___ no fury…”HATH
- 50a. Kind of teen phase, maybeEMO
- 51a. Ex-middleweight champ TonyZALE
- 52a. “No ___,” existentialist play by Jean-Paul Sartre that was originally written in FrenchEXIT
- 53a. Spanish titleDON
- 54a. Send forth?EMIT
Down
- 1d. Karachi’s home, for shortPAK
- 2d. Kanye West’s “I ___ God”: 2 wds.AMA
- 3d. “Neither a borrower, ___…”NOR
- 4d. Socrates and Aristotle, e.g.GREEKS
- 5d. Height enhancer, for a clownSTILT
- 6d. Next of ___ (relatives)KIN
- 7d. “I’ll be with you ___ moments”: 3 wds.INAFEW
- 8d. Pasta, potatoes, and rice have themCARBS
- 9d. Say confidentlyAVER
- 10d. “The Name of the ___,” best-selling novel by Umberto Eco that was originally written in ItalianROSE
- 11d. Dynamite relative: Abbr.TNT
- 16d. Word that suggests a name changeNEE
- 20d. Blind rageIRE
- 21d. What a greedy person wantsMORE
- 22d. Wish ___ a starUPON
- 23d. Sought damages in courtSUED
- 24d. “Bald” bird of preyEAGLE
- 27d. AMC’s “Better Call ___”SAUL
- 28d. Teen’s skin woeACNE
- 29d. New York’s baseball teamMETS
- 31d. Cleft locale, for Henry CavillCHIN
- 32d. Platform for SiriIOS
- 36d. “The Girl with the ___ Tattoo,” best-selling novel by Stieg Larsson that was originally written in SwedishDRAGON
- 37d. Filled with anger?ABLAZE
- 38d. “Right makes ___” (Lincoln quote)MIGHT
- 39d. ___ Jordan (Nike shoes)AIR
- 40d. Persuade gently, with sweet-talkCOAX
- 41d. Prefix for the oppositionANTI
- 43d. Maroon 5’s “___ Will Be Loved”SHE
- 44d. ___ school (doctor’s alma mater, for short)MED
- 45d. “As I see it,” in textspeak: Abbr.IMO
- 46d. “___ o’ Shanter”TAM
- 47d. Cotton gin inventor WhitneyELI
- 48d. Game-match connectorSET